Cover Image: Drowning with Others

Drowning with Others

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This book was a fast paced edge of your seat book and I loved every second. It kept me guessing but didn't have outrageous plot twists to keep younreading. It was believable. Which made it that much better

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I really enjoyed this! I like books about the mystery element happening in the past and coming back to haunt them later on.

I really liked the pace of the book. I'm usually not a fan of diary entries in books, but I think it worked well here and wasn't distracting/out of place with what was going on in our current day. The diary entire are written by the main characters, Ian and Andi, who are now married. It's their daughter, Cassidy's, journalism class that's looking into what happened all those years ago.

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Who doesn’t like a book about past secrets being dug up? I love them! Drowning With Others was just that book for me. It kept my attention with its suspense and story line. It was a bit lengthy but that didn’t discourage me from finishing it. I was a teenager in the 90’s so I really enjoyed all the references! Good characters, good mysterious plot, and a crime to solve are the best ingredients for a good book and this one had it all. Told from the point of view of three characters, you get a good feel of everything going on from all perspectives and the back and forth between two timelines was very well done. Worth the read!

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I'm torn about this book. I enjoyed the story for the most part and found the plot very compelling, but I pretty much hated the ending. It just wasn't a satisfying resolution--and by satisfying, I mean it didn't seem like a good payoff for the plot.

[One of my big gripes with this book was the loan Ian took out from his father-in-law. I really, really hate how a lot of books will use a husband I'm torn about this book. I enjoyed the story for the most part and found the plot very compelling, but I pretty much hated the ending. It just wasn't a satisfying resolution--and by satisfying, I mean it didn't seem like a good payoff for the plot.

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I received a free digital copy of this book from NetGalley in exchange for an honest review.


What a well written novel. I loved the introduction of two different timelines. One timeline is trying to solve a 20ish year old murder while the other focuses on the events leading up to the murder.

The character reveal was slow, but seemed to go well with the pacing of this book.

I really would have liked to see a more realistic ending to this book. It really just didn’t feel believable.


The plot itself was good, but really seemed to drag on and on. It didn’t take away from the story too much and I still really enjoyed it.

Thank you to the publisher, the author, and NetGalley for allowing me to review this title.

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An interesting book which caught me unawares. Past swimming its way to the present was the fun to read, it added to the mystery.
2 sweethearts Andi and Ian got married, their daughter Cassidy and her friend found a car in the swimming hole. It was a teacher from the time her parents attended the school. Now it was upto Cassidy and her mates to uncover the truth.
My first book by author Linda Keir, the story had dual timelines with multiple POV which took me some time to get with it. Tension built up slowly with every page. I liked the concept of daughter investigating the parents, it added to the thrill. The ending was unexpected, I wanted a great finale, it felt a little off.
Overall, it was a good family drama combined with a mystery of the past.

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Drowning with Others is a well written, moderately suspenseful story written with multiple narrative shifts. The trope holds familiarity to the genre which does lead to some transparency in the plot but nothing too overt. Linda Keir presents her characters with discretion in that they are slow to develop within the storyline itself. It is not until the end that the reader can truly appreciate all that has been delivered. A good read. 4 stars.


Thank you to #NetGalley and @LakeUnionPublishing for this ARC. It was read and reviewed voluntarily by Tarrah Marie (@wayward_readers). All thoughts and opinions are my own.

#waywardreader #wayward_readers #lindakeir

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Thanks to Net Galley and the publisher for a copy of this book to review !

Drowning With Others
by Linda Keir

***No Spoilers***
Loved It. From page one I was hooked. A decades old missing person mystery with a new clue surfacing from the bottom of a lake.

A student dives into Lake Loomis and unexpectedly collides with something hard and sharp. Further investigation uncovers a car located at the lakes bottom. It is soon realized that the car belongs to a former writer in residence of the prestigious Glenlake Academy, a poet who suddenly disappeared over two decades ago in 1996 before the school year had ended.

The story is told using duel timelines incorporating diary entries of main characters Ian & Andi Copeland , high school sweethearts and students of Glenlake Academy in 1996 and in present dialog, their daughter Cassidy, who is currently a senior at the school.

Glenlake's current writer in residence is a famous investigative journalist who assigns Cassidy's class project to investigate, report and try to get some answers to the mysterious disappearance of 22 years ago.

From the beginning there is a feeling that the elder Copelands may have something to hide. Do Ian and Andi have a secret that needs to be protected ? Did the missing writer have someone or something he was running from?

Cassidy, determined to get to the bottom of the mystery digs into her parents past and gets closer to the truth of what happened in 1996.

Senses tingling, I felt that I was at the scenes past and present, feeling the crisp fall breeze coming off the lake as the autumn leaves crackled and crunched beneath my footsteps.

I also found it very interesting that the author, Linda Keir, is a pen name for two authors who wrote this novel together. It makes sense with the duel timelines. I wonder if each writer assigned themselves a specific timeline, past or present? Yet another mystery and another reason to really enjoy this novel.

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I had no idea before I read this book that two authors collaborated. It is a seamless well written novel that deals realistically with an ongoing problem at most private schools and universities. The book alternates between two time frames twenty years apart and links them together brilliantly. I loved it. The characters were so well drawn and believable. We all harbor secrets and this novel exemplifies all the reasons we do... and why there must still be some even after revelations. Cassidy, the seeming heroine ,is a typical teenager who revels in her apparent journalistic coup but we know the truth and I loved that about the ending. Parents are still smarter than our kids give us credit for... thank heaven!

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Great read! Ian and Andi Copeland met when they attended Glenlake Academy, the very school their daughter Cassidy now attends. But when a submerged car is pulled from the lake and the body within is that of one of Ian and Andi's professors both Ian and Andi are overcome with memories of the past - and reminded of secrets that must stay buried. There are things they never told each other - or anyone else. Keir lets the story unwind at a leisurely pace but that doesn't keep the suspense from building. Excellent writing, superb plotting.

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This book is great. I really enjoyed the way it went back and forth between past and present. Ian and Andi were high school sweethearts and Andi took a class in journalism in her senior year which resulted in a affair between her and the instructor who was a famous poet. When the poet disappeared no one had any idea what happened to him until thirty years later when his body was found in his car at the bottom of Loomis Lake. Not to give anything away it was very interesting how the investigation into what happened to him was done.

Thanks to Net Galley for allowing me to read this arc.

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A solid 2.5-3 stars. I didnt particularly like any of the characters. The parents were dry and boring. Nothing about them was really interesting. I liked the mystery and I liked the back and forth time perspectives, but that was about it the first 50% or so was actually pretty boring but picked up a bit after that.

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first of all thank you NetGalley and Linda Keir for the opportunity to read this book. Second of all it was perfect! This book hit on every spot, I loved how it told the story from different POVs, ad from the journal entries. I liked that it hinted at history repeating itself, but not really. I liked the little side story that it had with Simon and Biz. I couldn't believe just how many people were actually involved in the story at the end. Makes me wonder what might have happened if nothing had happened. I loved this book!

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This really intrigued me and kept me hooked from the first page I just needed to know what was going to happen next! A fabulous read

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In an attempt to resurrect an old tradition, I believe referred to as the "freshman plunge" at Glenlake Academy, a student uncovers the decades old remains of former writer in residence Dallas Walker, seated in his beloved vehicle at the bottom of Lake Loomis. How did he end up here?

Ian Copeland and Andi Bloom met as teenagers at Glenlake Academy and apart from a brief separation senior year, have been together since. They could not be more proud of their own daughter Cassidy who is starting her senior year at Glenlake when the story begins. The writer in residence this year is a journalist and like her mother before her, Cassidy will be taking his class. Much to her parents dismay, the journalism class will be focusing on investigating how the former writer in residence Dallas Walker ended up at the bottom of Lake Loomis with his car. The investigation brings up memories from 20 years earlier that both her parents and staff would have preferred to stay buried, but Cassidy keeps pushing with the investigation. Could her very own parents be involved?

I really enjoyed this book. There is no major suspense or guessing. It's pretty obvious what will happen next. All of that aside, it's a well written story (particularly the journal entries) with interesting characters.

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When a body is pulled from the lake at a boarding school, the journalism class investigates the death. Ian and Andi, who were students at the time of the death, have ties to the dead man, and their daughter is one of the class investigating. I enjoyed this, even if the ending was a little underwhelming. It wasn't a really suspenseful one, more about the characters themselves. 3.5 stars rounded to 4.

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Ian and Andi have managed to keep a secret for many years- since high school- even as they built a life together. Things are looking really good for them and then, the last thing they could have expected happened. Their own daughter, Cassidy, is the one who begins to begins to unwind those secrets when the body of Dallas Walker, who taught at her school when her parents attended it, is pulled up (in his car) from the bottom of the local swimming hole. This is told in two time lines- when Andi and Ian were in school and the present. It sags a bit in spots but on balance it's a good read. Thanks to Netgalley for the ARC.

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A good easy read about the lies we tell and the secrets we keep.

Thank you to Netgalley for my copy.

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I loved this book- the pacing, the plot structure, the characters. I normally prefer my mysteries to have a bit more suspense, but this was so well-written that it kept me rapt throughout. Though the book’s chapters focus on different characters at different times, each narrative was distinct enough that the chapter transitions seemed seamless. This would be a fantastic book club pick.

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No one can keep secrets these days...

And so begins the exquisitely character-driven novel, Drowning with Others. I started reading this late last night, and just finished today. I could hardly put it down. While it does seem a little too drawn out, I found it to be a fun, quirky, beautifully rendered suspense.

Perhaps it was all the references to the mid to late 90s, when I was in college myself, but the book really resonated with me. I enjoyed the characters, and the mystery was unexpectedly good. I thought the book was heading one way, yet it went head-first in another direction...which I loved. Told from three points of view, those of Andi (the mother), Ian (the father), and Cassidy (their daughter), the time-frame bounces from present day (during Cassidy's senior year in high school) to the 1996-97 school year, when Ian & Andi were the senior "it" couple at Glenlake Academy...a prestigious, elite boarding school near Chicago. It also includes journal entries from each, which were probably my favorite sections.

Truly, my only gripe with this story was the Investigative Journalism class trying to solve a 20 year old crime. Not sure I really found it plausible, as they'd be interfering with an on-going investigation. Nevertheless, I think this one is well worth reading...particularly if you enjoy slow-burning mysteries with absolutely awesome red-herrings.

3.5 stars rounded up.

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