
Member Reviews

Little Darlings spotlights a new mother's dark and twisty tale of abduction, admist a frighteningly realistic fairy tale component. A modern day mother's worst nightmare. Fast paced page turner, with elements of very creepy fantasy. Four Stars. Look for LITTLE DARLINGS to be published on 30 April 19. My thanks to NetGalley, the publisher and Melanie Goldng, for the digital ARC, in exchange for my honest review.

I’m usually not big on fairy tale retellings or books with a supernatural twist but the premise of this one just sounded too good to pass up and I’m so glad I gave it a chance! This was a dark read with a super creepy tone and a spooky atmosphere that gave me the shivers.
Lauren is the ultimate unreliable narrator, I was never quite sure if she was just a new mom suffering from some sort of post partum psychosis or if she was truly living some kind of bizarre, scary fairytale. Even she questions her own thoughts and feelings so it was difficult to pinpoint what was actually going on and it was also very entertaining. Add in mounting suspense that just got more intense as the story progressed and I was hooked. Harper, the police officer working the case also offers a POV and I liked the police procedural vibe this aspect brought as well.
This was a truly unique read, a real page turner that got under my skin and scared the daylights out of me at times. Recommended if you want something different and don’t mind a hint of the supernatural.
Little Darlings in three words: Unsettling, Menacing and Dark.

4.5 stars. When I received the ARC of "Little Darlings" a few months ago, I was super excited and determined that I would read it right away. It already had a few glowing reviews, and the description of the book made it sound like exactly my kind of read. Babies, folktales, things that go bump in the night.. definitely my kind of book.
What I didn't count on was that I would get super freaked out and not want to read it. I usually read late at night/early in the morning while nursing my baby. Melanie Golding did an amazing job describing post-partum depression/anxiety with a horror twist/element. Main character, Lauren Tranter, has just had twins and is convinced that something is out to get her babies. I didn't have twins and I am lucky to have wonderful support with my husband, but I felt her exhaustion and craziness a bit too much.
The start of the book was a bit slow, but once I got about 40% in the book, I had to know what was going to happen. Definitely had to stop a few times and check out the goosebumps I got from reading. I'm sure that it mostly had to do with my own baby being with me while I read, but it was one of the creepier, more unsettling books I've read. I wanted to hold by baby a bit closer when I finished.
Unfortunately, the only character I didn't like was the main female detective. I almost always wanted to the viewpoint to go back to Lauren (the viewpoint changed between these two lead characters). I felt that the minor romance in the story detracted from the rest of the story. The men in the story were all one-dimensional, but it's forgivable since the story isn't about them. I also felt the ending was a bit rushed, especially from Lauren's viewpoint.
I enjoyed this book a lot and wish it success on its upcoming April release!
Thank you Netgalley, Crooked Lane Books, and Melanie Golding for the ARC of this book in exchange for an honest review. It was certainly a creepy one and I am very happy to have read it!

Part fairy tale, part mystery and part horror, Little Darlings is a creative and chilling tale of a mother, and her twin baby boys, and what happens to the three of them, soon after their birth. Shortly after the story begins, Lauren Tranter encounters a woman in the hospital, who wants to trade her babies for Lauren's. She called for her after she locks herself and her boys - Morgan and Riley, in the the bathroom in her hospital room. When help arrives, there is no one there but Lauren and the babies, and everyone thinks that she is simply overtired and needs to sleep, or for some, that she is losing her mind. However, Lauren knows what she saw and knows there is a danger to her boys. She tries everything she can to keep them safe. One day, about a month after they were born, Lauren and the boys go to the park to see her other Mom friends and their babies. She takes a walk, and sits on a bench... just to take a rest. Sometime later, she wakes up and her babies are gone. What is this Mom to do? She will do anything to get her babies back. Even something completely unthinkable.
Has this review grabbed your attention? The book will take your attention and hold it until the end of this strange, creepy story.
Thanks to Netgalley and Crooked Lane Books for the opportunity to read an advanced copy of Little Darlings, in exchange for my honest review.

I went into “Little Darlings” knowing it was a supernatural thriller inspired by Grimm’s fairy tales, but I didn’t realize I’d experience such textured prose. Golding’s ability to spin a story with language is beyond skillful. She’s downright gifted. She pulls you in. Well, actually, she kind of grips you, her text’s curling tendrils clamping down and jerking you inside. The wince-worthy details, the evocative descriptors, the elegant way she describes some of the most gory moments of bodily harm due to childbirth, all of it feeds your imagination. Her writing calls to mind Neil Gaiman’s. There’s a layering to the work of both writers that makes the reader feel as if she sinks into their stories, like feet in quicksand or hands into mud.
Here, Golding sets the stage for a psychological thriller that has you questioning her main character’s delusions. Are they delusions? Is she reliable? She’s sleep-deprived, literally drained of her sustenance, and her husband’s behavior toward her may be categorized as abusive. After delivering her twin boys, she’s kind of abandoned, at least mentally. It’s no wonder she experiences what she does. Golding does such a valid job of making insanity plausible. If anything, this story is a cautionary tale for pregnancy -- not motherhood. It’s the trauma of delivery that leaves the scars.
But -- and this is what has me feeling disappointed -- the mystery is never really resolved. The reader is asked to take imaginative leaps and essentially fill in the missing bits. Or the reader is left to decide on her own what she thinks happened. This is where the story comes off as lazy for me. It’s built up in such a masterful way, and yet by the end you realize not much happens. The puzzling aspects aren’t all that mysterious because they are either real and you’re asked to accept the implausible. Or they are the results of a mental breakdown. Either way, the finale is unsatisfying. There isn’t even a moral at the end, which is essentially wanted, not that this is a fairy tale, but it borrows heavily and modernizes. So we don’t come away having learned anything. I actually feel like the story is left unfinished, which may be because we ended up in a corner we couldn’t get out of, narratively speaking. The MC is crazy. The MC isn’t crazy. We either live in a world where impossible things happen or we don’t. Neither of these offer reasonable closure. Even the detective character, who’s the pragmatist and the one to follow hard facts, isn’t sure in the end. She must be just as unsatisfied, though the tidy wrap-up of her storyline wouldn’t suggest so.
I definitely recommend this read for those who love well-written thrillers to sink the teeth into. Just beware curiosity is sparked but may never be satisfied.

Little Darlings is a dark fairy tale like story. It will keep you engaged and a little freaked out. The writing is solid if a bit out there.

A haunting tale based on changeling folklore. A mother, Lauren, is convinced that someone (or something) is out to switch her newborns, and when they succeed, she spirals deeply into a web of fear and delusions (or, so the doctors say).
I became hooked shortly after the first few chapters, and following Lauren's paranoia, needed to know what was going to happen to the babies. There were sections I wished were a bit faster paced, and maybe included more of the lore, but I enjoyed reading this one.

This book was gripping from the very beginning. The author really brought across the emotions, and feelings of being a new mother in the first chapters. I loved the multiple perspectives of Lauren and the deputy Jo. I couldn’t put this one down, and recommend it.

I requested an ARC of this book whenever I realized it was being made into a movie, and for the fact that I'm always drawn to novels that portray a mother and her children. This book will give you all the creepy feels and disturbing emotions while reading. I knew I would enjoy this one from the start, and I was right. I thought it had a good storyline as well as very interesting characters. Thank you for the opportunity to read and review this novel in exchange for my honest and true thoughts.

Little Darlings, is a debut novel by Melanie Golding. A well-written creepy read with a dark fairy tale aspect. What a great debut!! I love reading new authors and this one will definitely be added to my favorites list.
The main characters are Lauren and Patrick Tranter, new parents of twin baby boys. Lauren is quickly feeling overwhelmed after the birth and gets little help from her husband. Patrick is a little jerk…once the babies are born his true selfish side comes out when he doesn’t want to help Lauren out.
My favorite character would have to be Detective Sergeant Jo Harper. Jo has issues from her past that haunt her making Lauren’s case something that she couldn’t brush off. When no one else believes Lauren, Jo does. Jo is a “fly by the seat of your pants” kind of police officer. She isn’t a dirty cop but she doesn’t always follow all the correct procedures. She had a chance to try for an inspector job but she likes the hands-on part of investigating, she doesn’t want to be stuck in an office.
Little Darlings is an atmospheric tale that kept me interested throughout. The build up to the ending was spot-on. I would recommend this book to those who love psychological thrillers mixed with a little supernatural and dark fairy tale. Thanks so much to author, Melanie Golding and Crooked Lane Books for providing me a copy of this book.

This book was EXACTLY what I like in a "horror" novel: wildly, believably creepy, but no gore! Seriously, it is something that any mother would get a shiver up her spine thinking about. This is only the second novel I have ever read that had the "Changeling" theme, and I liked this one MUCH better than the first.
The story of Lauren and her twins was set in the present day, but borrowed themes of folktales from long ago. Combine that with the added bonus of an underwater flooded town from the 1800's, a psych ward, and a spouse with questionable loyalty, and Little Darlings ticks off many boxes for a novel that is as entertaining as can be.
I will be recommending this debut novel to anyone who likes modern fairy tales, light horror, or domestic suspense. It contains all those elements.
Thanks to NetGalley and Crooked Lane Books for my advanced ecopy of this novel in exchange for an honest review.

Holy cow. I can’t even begin to describe the ride I was on with this book. Twists and turns and trying to figure out which character was to be believed. It starts as a perfect family story and then becomes a little twisted fairy tale. This book really quickened my pulse towards the end. So unlike anything I’ve read before, I loved the darkness to it. And the end...all is well. Thank you to NetGalley and Crooked Lane Books for an advanced copy. I highly recommend. 5/5 ⭐️

I was underwhelmed by the writing in this. The structure of the story is odd, with the incident in the book's description of the babies being switched took a frustratingly long time to occur, and the remaining chapters stagnating because the protagonist ends up trapped in a single location. It's odd.
I did like the idea that the changelings were a kind of metaphor for postpartum depression, and I really liked Harper as a supporting character.

I really enjoyed the creepy changeling story line. There were moments that the imagery created was perfect and the creepy factor intense. Unfortunately there were more moments that failed for me. While I like Lauren, I did not like Harper, Patrick or Amy. Did the author want Patrick to be a good guy or a bad guy? It was unclear and I would have liked her to pick one path or another. I do not like police procedure novels for the most part but this story needed a bit more procedure. The detective side was a bit too naive and simplistic. I also do not see a need for the suggested relationship between Harper and Amy. Since the relationship doesn't really ever flesh out, it could have just as easily been a friendship. I found that to be a bit cheesy and maybe more to jump on the politically correct band wagon n.
I enjoyed the middle third of the book the most but the ending fell a bit flat for me. Overall it was a nice little read. I enjoyed it but wasn't wowed..

After having her twin boys, Lauren Tranter was way beyond tired; even in the hospital she was unable to relax and get some much-needed rest. The first night the boys were with her, she heard singing and saw a woman, dressed in black rags, and Lauren was convinced this strange woman had come to steal her babies. Lauren frantically called 999 (the British equivalent of 911) and reported an intruder in her room, but there was no video evidence and no sign of anyone, and Lauren was sent home with the boys with only her husband Patrick to help.
Detective Inspector Joanna Harper came across the case, and due to her personal circumstances, she is intrigued. Against her supervisor’s wishes, Harper visits Lauren and witnesses another episode, where Lauren is convinced the woman is outside, waiting to take the boys and exchange them with her own twins. Patrick insists nothing is there, and insists all will be fine if Lauren just gets out more. When Lauren takes the boys to visit with her friends a month later, and falls asleep by the river, the boys disappear and Harper is called. Once the boys are located, Lauren is convinced they have been switched, that they are changelings, and she will do whatever it takes to have Morgan and Riley returned to her.
I really liked this super creepy book, with the old fairy tales of changelings woven in, testing the modern day limits of reality versus mental illness. And really, why should Lauren not have been believed? An exhausted new mother, with little to no help to care for the boys, an antique book of stories about twins left on her doorstep, who also has a history of depression…

This book was very much creepy in a good way. I enjoyed the story of missing/replaced twins. The book kept me reading more to find out what would happen next. It was so good I almost could not put it down when I needed to. A new mother is always tired but twins makes it that much harder. What a great book! *This book was given to me for free at my request from NetGalley and I provided this voluntary review.*

Super creepy! Hardly slept! I loved this one! Neil Gailman fans will loveeee also fans of Sarah J Mass will enjoy! So good!

Folklore, myth and reality intertwine in this heart wrenching thriller. A mother’s worst fear...he children abducted and then returned but the children were not hers but something sinister.
This book gives a front seat look into postpartum Depression mingled with otherworldy influences.

Throughout the book I vacillated numerous times between thinking she was suffering from postpartum depression and thinking the babies had really been switched. Is Lauren losing her mind? Will anybody believe her? I loved that this was an unreliable narrator born from nature rather than alcohol, as so many seem to be lately. The tale is so cleverly told I had no idea what to believe from one page to the next.

ARC provided by the publisher via Netgalley. Wowwww! I just finished this book in one sitting. The story is utterly captivating from the very first that I couldn't not finish it or put it away for later. I can't believe that this is the Author's debut book, I will for sure read all her books in future. My sincere thanks to the publisher for giving me an ARC.