
Member Reviews

This book was amazing! I began reading and could not stop reading until I had finished it! It was a dark, twisted and unsettling read, but one I enjoyed precisely because of those factors. We follow the story of Lauren, who has just given birth to twin boys, and she keeps seing this horrible woman who wants to change babies with her. Everyone tells her she is psychotic, that the woman doesn't exist, that her babies are safe... but she keeps on seeing and hearing the woman, and weird things keep on happening around her.
I loved how twisted the story was, making you doubt Laure'ns sanity: is she crazy? Does the woman exist? What the heck is going on? And there were times in which the story was so disturbing that you had to keep on reading praying nothing of what was happening was real.
The prose is amazing, the author really know how to alternate being fear, being rational, being grimm fairy tales-que, telling the story from a new exhausted mom's point of view and then switching characters... it had me trapped and I couldn't put it down until I had finished it.
The characters are so well developed you could think they are real, they all have their things and manias and quirks and are very much alive, and you can feel what they go through easily.
I would recommend this book to anyone who likes thrillers and dark creepy tales, because the author weaves an amazing story out fo the two. And it's her first book! I really can't wait to see what she does next!

SOON TO BE A MAJOR MOTION PICTURE!
I am so glad that this book is going to be a movie, it'll be great to see the characters come to life on the big screen.
Everyone says Lauren Tranter is exhausted, that she needs rest. And they’re right; with newborn twins, Morgan and Riley, she’s never been more tired in her life. But she knows what she saw: that night, in her hospital room, a woman tried to take her babies and replace them with her own…creatures. Yet when the police arrived, they saw no one. Everyone, from her doctor to her husband, thinks she’s imagining things.
This is a creepily, clever dark story that will make you want to check on your little darlings constantly just to be sure they are safe and sound.
#LittleDarlingsBook by Melanie Golding
A huge thank you to #NetGalley for this ARC
Pub Date: 10 May 2019

A wonderful modern retelling of an ancient story. I was hooked from the beginning and went along for the whole ride in one sitting. I went back and forth with Laura and the truth. Is she crazy? Has someone taken her children? Pulse pounding story with incredible ties to the past. Loved all the folklore and ancient text inserts. Highly recommend.
The ending was interesting in that it didn't feel like closure. Is that a sequel I smell? Yes please!

This is not a book that you want to read if you are expecting a child or if you believe in folklore superstition. I was impressed with the detective for not giving up on the case because of her gut feeling. She knew something was not right and decided to investigate it further. I feel bad for the mom because she was just trying to protect her babies and now she is looked at like a monster. Never doubt your gut because it is generally right. Especially when you are a mom!!

Little Darlings is an excellent and unsettling read! I found this book to be totally unexpected in the best of ways and I could not put it down! I hope the author continues writing because I am now an instant fan girl!

This book was the perfect pick for a spooky October read! I grew up on the dark fairy tales of Grimm and Hans Christen Andersen, and this book had many of the same elements.
After Lauren gives birth to twins, she is convinced that a woman is trying to take them from her and change them into something else, as she warns. After a disappearance scare, she now believes her twins are changelings and she must return them to the river in order for her real children to come home. She's committed to a mental hospital, and things ramp up to scary as Jo Harper, a detective, tries to figure out what actually happened to the twins. The ending ties in some neat elements of realism and historical lore.
With the mix of unreliable narration, a past history of mental illness, and a husband acting suspiciously, I was kept on the edge of my seat! I couldn't tell what was real and what was a side effect of psychosis, and the writing was so real and descriptive that it was almost hard to stomach in a few spots. I double-checked the locks on my doors after reading it!

Thank you netgalley for this sample copy in exchange for my honest review. GREAT BOOK! It was a page turner and had me feeling different emotions all throughout. I definitely recommend this book. Flow is great, story line is gripping, and it is psychological thriller perfect.

Excellent read. At the end I was surprised to see this was a debut novel. Wow, this author has great talent and I look forward to more novels from her. This one kept you reading and kept you guessing. Well done.

Little Darlings is a creepy page-turner. I love the way the author integrated folklore to her modern story of a mother’s nightmare of twins stolen and replaced with changelings. Is she experiencing this or has she lost her grip on reality? Well written and highly effective entertainment for fans of the genre.

Thank you to NetGalley and the publisher for the E-Arc copy.
Whoo... I must first say that I have been on a dark journey lately with reading adult fiction. I recently read Baby Teeth and was mesmerized by it. It stayed with me for weeks. Once it had cleared, I have been reading a lot of YA, so when I saw Little Darlings I thought why not. Well...Little Darlings seeps under your skin slowly and before you know it the book is finished. Seriously finished. Melanie Golding is a author to watch out for with this one. What I loved about this book is that it is dark and creepy, but not in the way you expect. It pulls at your gut, your instincts of what feels out of place, not necessarily what you see. The author plays on that perfectly. Do not underestimate this book because just when you think you know..maybe you don't. It made me glad to be a reader again. Reading a book should make your feel and think for a while sometimes. Sanity is a very thin line.

Little Darlings
By Melanie Golding
expected due date 4-30-19 (kindle & ebook) Crooked Lane Books and 5-2-19 (Hardcover) Harper Avenue
You don't need blood and gore to make a great horror story. Atmosphere, if masterfully done, will keep you creeped out and chill you to the bone.This eerie story will do that.This is done that masterfully. It will engage your mind on a wild ride and leave you so haunted, you may begin to question your own state of sanity, your own definition of sanity.
Lauren Tranter has just had twin boys-she is exhausted-but she is absolutely sure she saw a woman creep into the hospital and switch her twins with a different set of twins. No one takes her seriously. They think she's losing it. She is quite sure she is not. Soon she is home with her boys. She takes them to the park one afternoon and they disappear, but are soon found. They seem different to her...Lauren does not believe they are HER babies and becomes obsessed with getting HER babies back. She has a plan. Will she be able to carry off her plan?What's with her husband, Patrick?
This is so damn chilling and creepy. The atmosphere, the perfect pace and personable characters, make it hard not to get caught up in this story. Its that good.
I would not be surprised if its made into a movie or series.
Due late April / early May 2019. Put it on your must buy list.
I am keeping my eyes on Melanie Golding!
Thank you to Crooked Lane Books and #NetGalley for this advance copy.
#LittleDarlingsBook

When Lauren reports having a visit in the night from a sinister character carrying a basket of twins that she plans to replace Lauren's twins with, the story is dismissed as ludicrous. Hospital staff, as well as her husband, think Lauren is just hormonal and exhausted after giving birth to twins.
Since the police can find nothing proving that this new Mama had any visitors, Lauren agrees that she is exhausted and maybe it didn't really happen. However, in her heart, she can't rule out that the visit in the night certainly felt like it occurred.
The only person who somewhat believes Lauren is the investigator, but her ranking officers want the investigation to stop. This part is a driving force in causing the reader to continue flipping pages.
Upon getting home from the hospital she is faced with a husband who needs his sleep so that he can work and support the family. He moves to another bedroom so the feeding of the twins all night won't disturb him. But because of Lauren's fear that the experience in the hospital was real, she locks up the house and only gets to sleep in bits and segments. She doesn't feel she can let the twins out of her sight.
In time, Lauren's friends visit her at her home and bring gifts for the new babies, but one gift is most unusual. One that is somewhat disturbing.
At her friends' urging, Lauren finally chances going out and meeting them in a park. She vows to keep a good eye on her identical twin boys. But will she be able to?
This story is framed in dark history and folklore.
My Thoughts
What Concerned Me: This story is a bit dark and foreboding. I'm not sure how I would have wanted it to end, but it didn't feel totally satisfying to me.
What I Liked Most: This is a book that was hard to put down. The writing was excellent and flowed beautifully. Was it kind of creepy? Sure. When I read the tag: Horror, along with Mystery, and Thriller, I wondered how I'd missed that important word, since horror is the last type of book I'd choose to read. (But maybe I'm confusing that genre with horror movies that I see advertised. Anyway, nothing gory, and nobody carrying a chainsaw! To my great relief! Teehee.)
I'd rate the writing and interest level a 5. The ending felt like a 3 or 4.

Suitably creepy and unnerving. Nothing new here in domestic horror, but great descriptive language and a fun quick read.

Lauren is a new mother of twins who claims that a woman threatened to steal her babies while she was in the hospital. Everyone else believes that she is having delusions. She continues to feel threatened even after returning home until finally the unthinkable happens. But were the babies really taken or is it just an elaborate setup created by an unhinged mind?
I enjoyed this story and found it mildly creepy, but I think it would be better as a movie. The babies were strange, but nothing really seemed threatening and I think the story lagged a lot in the middle.

Little Darlings is a look into folklore and insanity using twin babies as it's crux.
Lauren has a tough birth with her twin boys. Exhausted and in pain, she tries her best to love her children and give them what they need. That night as she lay in the maternity ward, an old woman appears before here threatening to take her sons and replacing them with her own. When Laura reports the incident everyone thinks she crazy. She hopes when she gets home that things will get better, but she has a tough road ahead. Have the faeries really changed your children or is she losing her mind?
I really enjoyed this concept. I am huge on Faerie folklore and loved to see how this weaved into the story. I especially enjoyed the excerpts from writers about the folklore of changelings. This was a great plot device and I turned pages to find out if her children would be taken.
Unfortunately, about halfway through, the book slogs. The relationships outside the core couple drag the book down and one isn't really truly handled and someone walks away without consequences. The tension is also sporadic, spending too much time on the investigation than on these children which are the creepiest part of the story.
Little Darling is unique and captivating but isn't as creepy as you would think it would be.

Creepy and atmospheric tale about a young mother of newborn twins who is comvinced that someone (or something) is trying to steal them away and replace them with fae creatures. Based on Irish tales of changelings, this novel hits all the right spots. It'll have you wondering how fine the line between imaginings and reality really is. Devoured this book!!!

Wow, what a thriller! I struggled a bit to get into this in the beginning, but eventually the plot took off, and I was sucked in.
The protagonist, Lauren, gives birth to twins. A smelly, dirty woman attacks her in the hospital and tries to steal her babies. Nobody believes her, but an officer is dispatched to make a report. A series of strange events happen, and her lack of sleep from caring for the infants starts to get to her. Is she imaging everything?
Throughout the whole book I questioned what was real, and the ending was quite satisfying.
Thanks to NetGalley and the publisher for a free copy of this ebook in exchange for an unbiased review.

Thank you NetGalley and the publisher for an advanced readers copy of this book in exchange for an honest review.
I thought that this was a very well written original, chilling, addictive and disturbing thriller.
I highly recommend this book to everyone.

A mother always knows her own babies.....doesn't she? Of course she does.....right? Fairie tales show their sinister side in the current century for new mother of twins, Lauren. As a new mother, she knows whats best for her babies! Why does she feel so alone and why does no one believe what she knows to be true? As you read through Little Darlings you're on this wicked trip, like the water ride from hell, as you believe and doubt and believe and doubt and on and on....never knowing when this ride will really end, never knowing who to really trust in the end.
The main characters were richly developed and interesting. Without giving spoilers I will only say that we can easily visualize what Lauren see's in her "Little Darlings" and empathize with all of her thoughts and feelings.
I enjoyed this book and found myself grabbing it in the middle of the night for "a chapter" only to find myself still reading an hour later. Mystery, fantasy, horror and crime with a nice dose of the creeps. Well done.

Changeling: A changeling is a child who is suspected to not be a couple’s real child.
As the myth goes, a changeling was substituted by fairies. (vocabulary.com)
Often shown in art and literature, the notion of changelings is centuries old. The Brother's Grimm wrote numerous stories about changelings. When the basis of these stories were typically children with developmental diseases or disorders, the rationale of a perfectly normal child having been replaced with a faery child is one that made sense to those living as peasants in pre-industrial Europe. Little Darlings takes this myth and gives it a horrifying modern-day makeover.
Lauren Tranter has just given birth to twins. As a new mother, she's exhausted. The birth was traumatic with forceps being necessary and hemorrhaging the day after. She doesn't have the bonded feeling with the babies that everyone said would happen. During the nights in the hospital, she hears another woman in the adjourning bay with her own set of twins. However, when morning comes, there is no one there. She struggles through the second day and again, when night falls, the woman appears again, singing a horrible, creepy song. This time, the woman offers her a deal. One of her babes for one of Lauren's. Of course, Lauren takes her babies and locks herself in the bathroom to hide when the woman becomes forceful.
Thus starts the nightmare that Lauren's life will become. When there's no evidence of the woman existing and that this event occurred, no one believes Lauren. Everyone simply thinks Lauren is overwhelmed and tired. Her husband is no help and Lauren feels all alone. When the babies briefly disappear after Lauren falls asleep on a bench near the river, Lauren believes that the woman made true on her promise to take her babies and replace them with her own.
Little Darlings is a gritty look into motherhood. In the end, you are left to wonder exactly what really happened. Did Lauren imagine all of it? Is she simply suffering from lack of sleep and a traumatic birth, or even postpartum depression? Or is it a possibility that maybe, just maybe, it all really happened?