Cover Image: One by One

One by One

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Member Reviews

One by One is getting 4 stars from me! I use the Goodreads guide for rating, which translates to, "I really liked" this book. This book, for me, was also an introduction to this author, whose other books I will be adding to my "to read" list! I read a lot, and I do mean A LOT of horror and supernatural books so it can be difficult to come across a book / author who has written something you have not read multiple times before. What originally attracted me to this book was its description in that I myself bought a home (built in the 1800s) that has proven to have a lot of history and stories to tell, much it very creepy. I felt that I would "connect" with the character of Alice, and I do not often relate to the characters I read about. I would certainly recommend this book, One by One, to anyone who loves the horror genre but craves something a little bit different, something they are not expecting. I appreciate the ARC from NetGalley / the publisher so very much as I now have a new author to enjoy! *I do apologize for the review delay and appreciate the reminder I received.*

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This is a horror story! I was really impressed with this book, you just don’t know what to expect, the ending was awesome!

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I really enjoyed One by One. To start off with it kind of reminded me of Amityville horror. This book is creepy and keeps you interested throughout the book!

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A fabulous twisty horror story. Take a large quirky house add a family that are struggling with family issues and you get one hell of a tale. A drawing on a wall seems to depict the family but one by one the images are covered with a large cross and people disappear. Who is haunting them and where do the lost ones go. This is the reality facing the daughter not only that she has found a diary that belonged to the previous girl who lived in the house. We get to hear her voice too as the diary is read , is she the one haunting the house or is it something more sinister. If you love a good suspenseful horror then you will love this book. It builds momentum leading to a crescendo of a finale that is just horrifyingly brilliant

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This is definitely one creepy story. Just the picture drawn on the wall was enough to creep me out. I thought the story was well thought out though a bit predictable.

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One by One is a fairly standard haunted house horror story. We follow a young girl, Alice as her parents uproot her from her childhood home to an old building with hidden charms that comes at a suspiciously low price. There are spooky noises in the night, a mysterious diary, rooms with secrets, a snow storm to block them in and then family members start to go missing. There’s nothing really earth shaking or new about the plot but it’s a solid story and kept my attention all the way through. It’s quite a quick read – I managed to finish it in a day and it kept me hooked throughout although I must admit I didn’t exactly feel scared at any point during the book. I liked the twist at the end although I did see it coming before the reveal.

The main character of Alice felt a lot older than her age of 10, and her brother Dean also seemed older than 14 – the way he spoke to his parents (and the fact they allowed him to behave that way!) didn’t feel realistic for someone so young. I think overall I would have liked a little more backstory on Mary’s family – the diary entries that gave us a glimpse into her life just felt a little too brief and vague to draw me into her story. Although I enjoyed the twist, I felt that actually it threw up a few plot holes to the more ‘horror’ elements of the story with hindsight.

Overall One by One is a fast paced read, but one that it is perhaps not wise to peer too deeply into. Thank you to NetGalley & Flame Tree Press for the chance to read the ARC in exchange for an honest review.

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A family buys an old house that needs some love and repair. Their daughter Alice enjoys the new place at first. It's fun to explore and discover things about the old house. But when a child's drawing is found on a wall underneath old wallpaper, the sinister side of the house is revealed.

OMG! This story creeped me the hell out! As mysterious X's started to appear on the drawing, Alice's family starts to disappear...one.....by......one. Such a creepy-cool atmospheric story! I loved it! Yes, that is a lot of exclamation points....but this was a binge read for me, so it earned a few !s. Any book that keeps me up until 3 am reading is a great story....IMHO.

I'm a big fan of this sort of horror. Atmospheric.....a creepy old house with evil lurking. Innocent characters....a family who just wants a fixer-upper to turn into a happy home. And some slow burn suspense. Nicely done!

This is the second book I've read by D.W. Gillespie. I enjoyed The Toy Thief as well. Definitely looking forward to more by this author!

**I voluntarily read a review copy of this book from Flame Tree Press via NetGalley. All opinions expressed are entirely my own.**

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You have to watch out for those houses deep in the woods

Alice Easton is 10 years old. Her mom, dad, older brother, and her move into this fixer upper deep in the woods of Tennessee. Alice likes the unusual house at first but then strange things start to happening.

First, a stick figure family very similar to hers is revealed under a piece of loose wallpaper. A diary mysteriously appears on her night table. She hears stories of the family that used to live in the house. And her father is changing (not for the better) - shades of THE SHINING.

This was a well-written spooky story that kept ramping up the suspense. Oh, and a blizzard plays a big part in the overall storyline.

I recommend this book to anyone that likes highly suspenseful thrillers with more than a touch of spookiness thrown in.

I received this book from Flame Tree Press through Net Galley in the hopes that I would read it and leave an unbiased review.

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Title: One By One

Author: D.W.Gillespie

Genre: horror

Pages:240

Rating: 4





The Easton family has just moved into their new fixer-upper, a beautiful old house that they bought at a steal, and Alice, the youngest of the family, is excited to explore the strange, new place. Her excitement turns to growing dread as she discovers a picture hidden under the old wallpaper, a child’s drawing of a family just like hers. Soon after, members of the family begin to disappear, each victim marked on the child’s drawing with a dark black X. It’s up to her to unlock the grim mystery of the house before she becomes the next victim.


My thoughts

This is my first book by this author and i do have to admit that it was the title and the cover that got me to request it from Netgalley , and I'm so glad I did , the way the author wrote about the house and described it give me goosebumps and made me feel like I was actually in the house , as well as made me never want to step foot in that creepy place.From start to finish it Dynamic, atmospheric, exciting and while keep you on the edge of you set as your reading it ,with that said I want to say thank you to Netgalley for letting me read and review it .

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SPOOKY AND CHILLING!

This book is an intense and very scary story with a presence of evil that horror fans should not miss reading!

The story centers around a family of four who have just moved into a huge new home that was purchased from the bank at a wonderful price. From day one the ten year old daughter (Alice) hears strange noises and is having bad dreams. The only member of the family who is excited about the house is the father so he doesn't take any of Alice's claims seriously. Alice discovers an old stick figure drawing of a family that looks like her family except the picture has a dog instead of their pet cat. Very strange and unnerving to everyone when they find an x painted over the dog the next day and then they find their cat missing. Is the house haunted? What happened to the family in the picture? Who used to own this house? Why is the house so dark and creepy? Why does the house seem to call only to Alice? Will the family survive the evil that lurks in their wake?

I loved this gritty and dark story that was told from the child's perspective that will resonate with any parent or person remembering what it felt like when they were only ten years old. There are scares galore and some really nasty scenes that are not meant for the feint hearted. "One by One" should not be missed and not read right before sleeping. D.W. Gillespie has written a wonderful horror story and since Halloween is around the corner, this would be a perfect time to read this insidious book!I

I want to thank the publisher Flame Tree Press and Netgalley for giving me an Advance Reading Copy and any opinions are mine alone!

I highly recommend "One by One" to any horror fan because it contains true evil within it's pages!
I have given a rating of 4 1/2 Insidious 🌟🌟🌟🌟✴ Stars!!



I

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One By One was great. It’s not an original idea for a story, but the writing is strong, the characters are fully realized and the pacing is excellent. The setting helps create the spooky, mysterious atmosphere that Gillespie is able to maintain throughout the novel. I was expecting the novel to go in a certain direction. Actually, the author does a very good job of leading the reader to that conclusion. When I found out what was really happening, I loved it. In hindsight, there were plenty of clues provided, but I didn’t put everything together until just before the big reveal. One by One is highly recommended. Thanks to NetGalley for the book.

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If your favoured reading material is a novel with a good sprinkling of suspense, mystery, scariness, dark horror and the supernatural then feel at liberty to read D. W. Gillespie's latest offering - One by One.

This novel was initially, a wonderfully eerie and atmospheric ghost story. Even when I was reading it in broad daylight it still gave me the shivers as my mind dwelt on a dark and spooky house out in the sticks. The author had a wonderful way with words, making me feel as though I was a character in the story.

Speaking of the characters, the story was told in third person, largely through the eyes of ten-year-old Alice. She was full of life and appeared older than her years and I really liked her inquisitive nature.

The house itself screamed of a terrible dark history and the author excelled in setting it up as a creepy and unsettling place, with a myriad of corridors and dark spaces. I knew from the outset that something bad was going to happen.

Towards the ending, the novel lost some of its spooky atmosphere and developed a more horror-like edge when the story took a turn that I wasn’t expecting. I realised that I had been fooled by apparent clichés, assuming that I knew what was going to happen when actually, I didn't. This novel was more about how families confront conflict amongst themselves as well as from outside influences and the story was much darker than I had imagined, going in. It escalated quickly and was resolved very realistically and in a way that I found most satisfying.

Overall, I'd say that One by One is a little gem and a book that I'm so pleased to have read!

I received a complimentary digital copy of this novel, at my own request, from Flame Tree Press via NetGalley. This review is my own unbiased opinion.

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An interesting, slightly terrifying story that follows a girl and her family who move into a very creepy old house and find that things are not exactly what they seem. Sounds. I Smells. A face. A strange drawing. A diary that appears out of no where. Is the house haunted? Or does the house want them all dead? What is going on? While her family slowly changes, Alice desperately searches for the truth, reading every page whilst battling the voices in her head, terrified to fall asleep. At only slightly over 200 pages you can knock this one out in a few hours and enjoy a thrilling page turner that will leave you guessing until the bitter end.

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Alice and her brother Dean with their parents move to a new house in the middle of nowhere. The strange house begins to effect them all. Her parents relationship, already on shaky ground seems to go from bad to worse and her warm and caring father changes overnight.

Things get worse when Alice uncovers a child’s drawing and one by one the members of the family disappear.

One by one kept me gripped from the start, I absolutely devoured this novel!

One of my favourite things is a haunted/creepy house, I always love reading the way a different author makes their mark on this horror staple.

This is the kind of novel that builds the tension from the beginning, slowly getting more and more sinister as it goes along, building into an explosive ending, which I didn’t see coming!

Dean, Alice’s older brother, reminded me so much of my son, his moodiness and the tendency to be on his phone or locked in his bedroom. I also think that the complex brother/sister relationship between Dean and Alice was portrayed really well.

The only quibble I had was with Alice’s character voice. She is meant to be ten but half the time she sounded older than I do! I think an older protagonist may have worked a little better.

One by one is solid spooky read, fully of plenty of tension and intrigue that will keep you turning those pages!

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I foresee nightmares. I really shouldn't have read this at night.


It seemed so simple: a big old isolated house in the woods, selling at a ridiculously low price. Sure, the house was an architectural oddity, a little unsettling. Reminiscent in a mild fashion of Lovecraftian non-Euclidean geometry. But not haunted. Just....odd.


Until ten-year-old Alice uncovers the stick-figure painting in the hall. Family members change. Then the cat--. But it's also subtle until about two-thirds of the way in: then my hair stood on end, my eyes bugged out, goosebumps covered me from head to.toe, nightmares entrenched themselves...no, no longer subtle at all.

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Ten-year-old Alice Easton moves into a new house with her family: mum, dad, and older brother, Dean. Whilst the dad is enthusiastic about the project, everyone else is hesitant, especially when they see the rambling, foreboding property. Hidden underneath a piece of peeling wallpaper, Alice finds a child's drawing of a family which looks remarkably like her own family, but then black crosses start appearing over the top of the stick figures and they start disappearing, one by one.

I thought this started out well. The author set the scene up perfectly and it was very creepy. Things did start to go downhill about halfway though, and I admit that I felt disheartened when I read that the family had a cat, Baxter. You just know what's going to happen. I also felt that Alice came across as an older character than a ten-year-old girl and that was a bit jarring. Overall it was an okay read but I won't be revisiting it.

TW: death of a pet, mentioning of sexual abuse.

Thanks to NetGalley and publishers, Flame Tree Press, for the opportunity to read an ARC.

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Blending psychological thriller and horror DW Gillespie’s One by One opens with the Easton family discussing the purchase of a ramshackled old house which the father Frank describes as their “new fixer-upper” after buying it for a knock-down price. There is an underlying strain in the marriage between Frank and Debra, both financial and personal, after he lost a steady job and now works in sales which is commission based. He is not a very good salesman. The other members of the Easton clan are ten-year-old Alice and fifteen-year-old Dean; the story is mainly seen from Alice’s perspective and Dean is a stereotypical moody teenager who spends most of the time either in his bedroom or clashing with his father.

Alice would have made an outstanding unreliable narrator but because the story is told in the third person that unique perspective is lost and I wonder whether that style may have suited for this novel. It also took some time to figure out exactly how old Alice was (unless I missed it early on) as she comes across as very mature, observant and incredibly wise to be only ten. Until her age was revealed I would have guessed she was around thirteen. Alice has a very active imagination and there are implied comments from other family members about her being a daydreamer who struggles with friendships. These are all tell-tale signs of a classic unreliable narrator. As soon as the family arrive at their new home Alice has an uncomfortable feeling “there are monsters here” she thinks, but at the same time it is she who is most in tune with the house.

Much of the plot revolves around the dynamics of the family; there are virtually no other characters in the story, and this was well judged and realistic as cracks begin to show. Alice obviously does not understand the finer detail of what is going on in her parent’s marriage and she laments the disappearance of the closeness she once had with her brother whom she once turned to for support. However, her musings, overactive imagination, misunderstandings, problems and loneliness are a major highlight of the story. She may have been mature beyond her years, but Alice was a striking lead character whom the reader will develop affection for as the plot both thickens and darkens.

One of the strengths of One by One is the fact that for most of the time the reader is unsure whether there is anything supernatural going on or not. Horror or thriller? Ultimately, it was a solid blend of both. This was handled very well and heading into the big finish it could have swung either way; it is always nice to be kept guessing and that helped turn the book into an enjoyable page-turner. There are also flashbacks to previous residents of the house (including the prologue) which drop the odd clue.

Friction develops early on when Alice is intrigued by what she discovers beneath peeling wallpaper; an intricate drawing of a family which looks just like her own, the only difference is that her family have a cat. Soon foreboding ‘X’ marks begin to appear on the drawing and both she and Dean are the prime suspects. Their parents are not amused and after the cat disappears a clever drama unfolds.

The house itself was an outstanding setting and its size is undoubtedly exaggerated by the child who describes it. Alice’s room is some distance from her parents and she struggles to sleep as her father takes a while adding curtains and her sense of isolation increases. The building also has a weird design where windows back onto other internal rooms. Alice’s discovery of a diary add to the tension and this allows the author to integrate other voices to the narrative and drop clues which are teased out nice and slowly.

Ultimately your opinion of One by One may well be shaped by how satisfying you find the ending and the big reveal which leads up to it. It failed to knock me out, but I still found it satisfying and the epilogue particularly moving. Others may find it did not live up to its early promise, but some of that may depend on whether you were expecting a thriller or a horror novel. This is a very solid story with a very catchy opening which will have you eating up pages quickly and is an entertaining few hours of escapism.

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The captivating and horrific story of a family that moves into a new house that was supposed to be a home and turned out to be their worst nightmare.

A family of four moves into a house and start to settle in. Their daughter Alice, thinks that something is not right in the house and there is a presence only she can feel.

After finding a diary of the girl that used to live there before and a creepy drawing on a wall depicting a family of four, just like them, weird things start to happen.

Watch a family fight for their survival and uncover very dark secrets that are hiding between the walls of the old house.

A great creepy story that will haunt you.

Disclaimer for child abuse.

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A by-the-numbers haunted house tale that goes beyond the genre, asking questions about psychological trauma and what happens when you're outside the spooky house but your mind still remains trapped.

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I loved this book! I liked how the story was told from Alice's perspective because it made the story more suspenseful. The house being its own character really set the tone of the story. The parallels between between events in the past and present really helped to slowly increase the tension. The twists in this novel were really well done! I will definitely read more books by this author!

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