Cover Image: Daisy Darker

Daisy Darker

Pub Date:   |   Archive Date:

Member Reviews

Alice Feeney can come what with what ever she wants: I'll love it!
I was so happy to put my hands on her newest book.
Daisy Darker is a woman with kind of a complicated family. When all of them meet to celebrate beloved Nana's birthday at her remote house strangest things start to happen. And those twists and turns are just perfect. And just when you think it might get too much- bang; all settled again.
Thank you so much #NetGalley #Pan Macmillan for an ARC of this perfect psychological thriller

Was this review helpful?

Daisy darker

Alice Feeney has done it again! I loved this tale of a family divided and forced together by the matriarchs 80th birthday. Beatrice Darker, also known as ‘Nana’ is throwing the soirée of the year for her dysfunctional family at the Ancestral home known as Seaglass when a storm closes in. The tide stops any of the family from leaving the house, but one by one, they start dying in mysterious circumstances.
There are many secrets being harboured at Seaglass and before the night is up, everything hidden will be revealed. Secrets cant stay in the dark forever!

From the beginning I knew I was going to love this book. I was already impressed by Feeneys previous book Rock Paper Scissors, so I had high expectations. She didn’t miss with this dark tale! I’m fact I may even like this one more. The plot captivated me and I found each character to have depth and charisma in a variety of ways. I didn’t see the twist coming and that is why I love Feeneys work. So original and easy to follow. Highly recommend!

Was this review helpful?

I did enjoy the first half quite a bit. The eerie atmosphere of the closed space and the old Seaglass house really made it for me. The fact that they were stuck for many hours together in that house until low tide was great.
I’m a huge fan of And Then They Were None so the premise for me was great!

However, the narration style was a bit odd for me from the beginning which made me unfortunately guess most of the plot twists quite early on… The second half became a bit too repetitive and following a rigid pattern and I was way less engaged overall in the story.

I don’t always mind predicting the twists, however the characters were unfortunately not very interesting and very caricatural. They were all despicable (except the dog), which made me very unmoved by any of their deaths, especially that as a retelling of the famous Agatha Christie novel we knew the pattern of killings and that they must all (or almost) die…

Overall, it’s a quick and fun read with a good eerie atmosphere, a nice setting, but a bit too predictable and repetitive.



Thank you so much NetGalley and PanMacmillan for my e-ARC of this book!

Was this review helpful?

Loved it! I must be the only person in the country who didn’t read its authors last book, it’s still sitting on my kindle waiting. I thought this was a brilliantly written and constructed story. Told from the perspective of Daisy, the youngest of three daughters who was born with a congenital heart condition which caused her to ‘die’ eight times before she was 13. Interspersed with less than complimentary poems about the family and Daisy’s childhood memories.

Briefly, the Darker family have congregated at Nanas home on a tiny island for her 80th birthday party. At the stroke of midnight Nana’s found dead and one hour later there is another dead body. Somebody is killing the Darker family – one by one. With no working phones and cut off by the tide they can only wait!

Full of suspense and acknowledge by the author as an homage to Agatha Christies locked door mystery “And Then There Were None “ this is a belter of a read. Everybody’s hiding their own secrets. I found myself suspecting everybody and nobody as the book progressed and with at least three reveals at the end I had only guessed one of them. I thought this was a really enthralling read. And before I go; when you finish reading the book to go back and re-read the note from the authors agent at the beginning of the book. It will all make sense now! ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️

Was this review helpful?

This is the first book that I have read by the author however it won't be the last. This was a really different book with this genre, the author spent time building the characters and their back stories and ensured that there were plenty pf twists and turns for the reader. I read this quickly and certainly did not see the end coming. I would recommend this to anyone who likes the crime, psychological thriller and as a stand alone book it means that you do not have to have read any of the previous novels by the author. Give daisy darker and her family a read you won't regret it.

Was this review helpful?

⭐️⭐️⭐️.5 stars nearly 4

This book started very slow, I know some people prefer this but I like a book that hooks me in. It is worth hanging in there however as about half way through, there’s a twist that did surprise me.

I really enjoyed the second half of the book; the characters you never really liked anyway get their karma but the reveal of the bad guy was a bit hard to believe….! Hard to say more really without giving anything away.

Not quite 4 stars due to the dragging start but worth it in the end.

Was this review helpful?

Delightfully intriguing, with nods to Agatha Christie and We Have Always Lived In The Castle. I did spot the main twist very early on (due to a bedroom sharing situation) but I was captivated enough to keep on reading and see where the author went with it.
It did read more like a YA novel at times, and I would recommend it to that age group, or to anyone who likes a decently turned out, undemanding mystery.

Was this review helpful?

Daisy is the youngest of three daughters and is all too aware she is her mother's least favourite. As adults, the family gather on their Nana's remote island home to celebrate her birthday but bad things happen to members of the family one at a time. I've love Alice Feeney's previous books so was excited to read this. It was a pleasant enough read but I wasn't overly gripped by it.

Was this review helpful?

I thought this was a really interesting take on a locked room murder that had a nice twist at the end which I wasn't really expecting. The author kid the surprise about the main character well and it was only when looking back that I noticed the clues along the way. This is a tragic story with some triggering things but overall a good fast paced thriller.

Was this review helpful?

I love Alice Feeney and I love books with a similar plot to And Then There Were None by Agatha Christie, so I was very excited to read Daisy Darker. Unfortunately, it was a let down for me.

I really liked the beginning. The setting was ominous and the different members of the Darker family were intriguing. I liked that the relationships between them were strained but the reason wasn't immediately apparent, and how we slowly found out more about them.

However, the book had way too many flashbacks for my tastes. The set up was quite slow, but I didn't mind it; however, even after the members of the family started dying, the pace didn't really pick up because much more time was spent in the past than in the present. I became bored after a while, even if I also hoped it would make sense in the end.

As for the final twist, unfortunately it really didn't work for me. While I didn't see it coming, It's not a type of twist I like and it left me disappointed. The motive also didn't convince me much.

I'm so sad I didn't like this book! However, the problems I had with it, especially the reveal, are matters of personal preference so other readers will probably enjoy the book more.

Was this review helpful?

Wow what an absolute cracker of a book!

This was a fantastic murder mystery thriller with an absolute cracker of a twist no one will see coming.

The setting/ atmosphere of this book was so chilling. It was claustrophobic and incredibly creepy. I had chills done my spine while reading this book.

The writing was brilliant. It was so engaging. I did not want to put this book down. It was a really quick read.

The plot was really interesting. At the beginning it doesn't seem anything remarkable or particularly different from lots of other books in this genre.

However, that twist at the end followed by another shocking twist was so unexpected but it was fantastically executed.

I loved everything about this book. Coming across a thriller like this is what reminds me why I love the genre.

Overall, I can't recommend this book enough. I can't wait to read more books from Alice Feeney in the future.

Was this review helpful?

3.5 STARS

It will soon be Nana's 80th birthday and the countdown has started. Not only until the birthday party, but until the next murder.

Quite a few And Then There Were None vibes were present in this author's latest tale. A locked-room setting in a decaying house on a secluded tidal island. They are trapped until the tide goes down. The house was filled with clock covered walls, mismatched retro furniture, enormous windows and shelves that sagged from the weight of so so many books. I could easily picture it. The setting is on point and my favorite aspect of the story.

The Darker family gathers to celebrate, but their reunion turns into a twisted game of murder tricks, solving chalk written rhymes and someones sleight of hand. Who will be the next victim and whose name will be crossed out next? Curiousity, rather than suspense is what kept me turning pages.

Most of the twists were easily predictable and underwhelming.There was one good eye popper though. I also didn't care for the big reveal - too much telling and providing explanations, but I guess that is one way to explain things and bring closure.

Not my favorite Feeney book (though it is hers)! I'm not sure what I was expecting, but something more original than this one. Just IMHO.

Was this review helpful?

Perfect for fans of Lucy Foley, Gillian Flynn and Paula Hawkins!

Alice Feeney knows how to write a breath-taking, claustrophobic thriller like few other people, and this was no exception. It's one of those books you suck up in one sitting because you keep thinking, "I'll stop at the next chapter," but the chapters all end on such incredible cliff-hangers that you can't help but read on. Much safer to stop in the middle of a chapter if you want to be able to put the book down (but don't, just block a weekend for it and gulp it down in one go).

The setting is a lonely island; cut off from the coast by both the tide and a storm raging through the night. Trapped there is a family, each with secrets to hide - and someone on the island must be a murderer. But is it one of them? Or is someone else hiding on the island?
This setting of an isolated group of people being picked off one by one, not knowing who to trust, is popular at the moment. I've read quite a few books in a similar vein recently, but I'll have to say this was one of the best, and I thoroughly enjoyed every minute of it. It was just the right book to take myself out of the craziness going on in the world right now for a weekend.

I want to thank Netgalley and Pan Macmillan for a free copy of this book in exchange for an honest review. All opinions here expressed are my own.

Was this review helpful?

Turn utterly lovely and unexpected book this turned out to be. I’m rather fed up of copies and in the style of Type books that sometimes feel as though they flood the market. You know the kind of thing X writing in the style of Y. But this was nothing like that this was a truly original gripping darkly funny and wonderfully immersive book. Please read this if you enjoy thought-provoking dark family centred mysteries. It was one of my favourite books this year so far.

Was this review helpful?

3.5 stars!

Thank you so much to NetGalley for giving me an ARC to review!

I really enjoyed this and was so excited to read it as it was compare to And Then There Were None. It really does hold a lot of similarity to Christie’s book but in a homage to it.

Although I loved the story and the pacing I kind of worked out the twist almost straight away.

Despite this I enjoyed the story and how it was written. Each character was written well in a way that made you want to hate them and also find out more about them. The reason I’m giving this a 3.5 is purely for the fact that the whole ending seems like s stretch when everything is laid out and explained. BUT I really did like the outcome despite feeling it was a not far fetched.

Great who-done-it read paying homage to a classic with its own twists.

Was this review helpful?

Another winner from the genius that is Alice Feeney!

When one of your favourite authors writes a book that pays homage to one of your favourite whodunit stories ever, is it any surprise if you devour it in almost no time?

I enjoyed this book so much! It has all the elements I love in a thriller and the author's work:

✅ An atmospheric setting
✅ Complex and flawed characters
✅ An emotionally rich and multi-layered story
✅ Intriguing relationships and family dynamics
✅ A whodunit that keeps you guessing
✅ A reveal that you never see coming. And makes to re-read the whole book again.

Alice Feeney's writing is brilliant as always and shines all the more so in her latest novel. We even have poems for all the main players here, which I absolutely loved. No wonder the author said in the acknowledgements that this is her favourite work! I think it might be mine too, but honestly it's hard to choose when I have enjoyed them all (even the less popular I Know Who You Are).

I am so ready for her next novel (2023 hopefully?) but until then, I'm just gonna re-read Daisy Darker because it *is* that kind of masterpiece.

Was this review helpful?

Daisy Darker has a broken heart. She has a heart condition that has made her ‘die’ several times and the doctor has told them that she won’t live long.
It is her Nana’s Eightieth birthday and the family have all come back to her home ‘Seaglass’. Which consists of her two divorced parents, Her sisters Rose and Lily and her daughter Trixie and the family friend Connor. The house is on a small island and can only be accessed at low tide. After that no one can leave the island and as Nana hasn’t paid the bill there is no phones either.
So, when her Nana is found dead the day before her birthday, there is no means of escape and as time goes on more bodies rack up. The only evidence that they seem to know what is going on is poems left by the perpetrator left on a notice board in the kitchen.
WOW Alice Feeney, you have done it again, with this haunting fairy tale/whodunnit mystery. I loved this from the very first page. This is the first book in a while that has made me gasp and left me shout out loud at the twist near the end. This is a gripping, tense, thriller with and Agatha Christie vibe which I realised even though I have not read any of her books but seen TV shows. But the author makes the story her own. This also about family. You can’t help the family you are born into and made me reminisce about my childhood when her heard about the slush puppy machine and the Walkman. All in all, a great mystery all rounder book, which I am sure like the authors other books is going to be a hit. 5 stars from me.

Was this review helpful?

I would like to thank Netgalley and Pan Macmillan for an advance copy of Daisy Darker, a stand-alone thriller set in a remote house at the end of a causeway in Cornwall.

The Darker family is gathering at Beatrice Darker’s house for her eightieth birthday. The house, Seaglass, is on an island and cut off from the mainland for eight hours at a time. This is the first time the family has been together in over a decade and it doesn’t go well. Apart from the squabbles someone is killing family members one at a time.

I have not read any of Ms Feeney’s previous novels so I came to Daisy Darker with an open mind and a bit of curiosity. Initially, despite loathing all the characters and not being overly convinced by their serious dysfunction, I found the narrative compulsive. I really wanted to know who was behind it all, or rather the comparisons to Agatha Christie’s And then there Were None let me guess and I wanted confirmation.

The novel is told entirely from Daisy Darker’s point of view and flips between the present day (2004) and seminal moments from the family’s past that explain their current dynamic. This is problematic for me, firstly because it soon becomes apparent that Daisy has secrets and isn’t exactly as she purports to be. She’s not called Darker for nothing. As I said I loathed the characters, so the behaviour of bratty teenagers and their equally selfish parents is not top reading for me. I also feel that it detracts from the genuine mystery and creepy atmosphere of present day events that get lost in all the angst of the past.

The imaginative and unusual ending makes up for some of the shortcomings, or perhaps I should say the shortcomings I perceive as I am sure plenty of readers will love all the dysfunction, in the novel. It took my breath away with its audacity and was a welcome finale to some turgid reading.

Daisy Darker is a mixed bag with a strong finish. 3.5*

Was this review helpful?

What a gripping mystery

This was a very disturbing but good read.

Thoroughly enjoyed from start to finish and could not get enough of.

This is a must read for anyone who enjoys a good thriller!!
Absolutely loved the characters, the plot, the tension - impossible to put it down.
Certainly recommended!

Was this review helpful?

This is the first Alice Feeney I have read so unlike other reviewers who have commented that this is a departure from her usual style, I went into it with no preconceptions. So many of my friends have raved about her books that when this popped up on Netgalley I wanted to give it a go.

Even if the blurb hadn't mentioned And Then There Were None, as a huge Agatha Christie fan, it was obvious very early on that this was the same sort of mystery. The challenge then of course was to figure out just which of these characters was going to be the last one standing and why.

I thoroughly enjoyed the slow burn lead up in the first half of the book as the reader gradually learns the history of this highly dysfunctional family where very few of them are actually likeable. Despite picking the culprit quite early on, I was totally invested in the story. The few twists at the end were clever, but without giving anything away, I did find I had to suspend my disbelief in the last 30 pages as a couple of decisions made by the characters didn't seem to me to be the choices they would make in real life. For that reason alone it would make for some good discussion in a book club!

Was this review helpful?