Monday 8 August 2022

#BlogTour - The Party House by Lin Anderson


'A real page-turner' – Ian Rankin

The Party House by Lin Anderson is a deeply atmospheric psychological thriller set in the Scottish Highlands, for fans of Lucy Foley, Ruth Ware and Sarah Pearse’s The Sanatorium.

Devastated by a recent pandemic brought in by outsiders, the villagers of Blackrig in the Scottish Highlands are outraged when they find that the nearby estate plans to reopen its luxury ‘party house’ to tourists.

As animosity sparks amongst the locals, part of the property is damaged and, in the ensuing chaos, the body of a young girl is found in the wreck. Seventeen-year-old Ailsa Cummings went missing five years ago, never to be seen again – until now.

The excavation of Ailsa’s remains ignites old suspicions cast on the men of this small community, including Greg, the estate’s gamekeeper. At the beginning of a burgeoning relationship with a new lover, Joanne, Greg is loath to discuss old wounds. Frightened by Greg’s reaction to the missing girl’s discovery, Joanne begins to doubt how well she knows this new man in her life. Then again, he’s not the only one with secrets in their volatile relationship . . .


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My first experience of the author, Lin Anderson’s THE PARTY HOUSE is very much a psychological thriller. The novel begins with the disappearance of Ailsa Cummings, a seventeen-year-old who vanishes from the woods surrounding the village of Blackrig in the Scottish Highlands, presumed by many to have run away, perhaps back to her former home in Glasgow. Five years later, the village is slowly recovering from the  devastation caused by the deaths of five children and a district nurse, their deaths due to a Covid 19 variant introduced by lockdown breaking visitors to the eponymous Party House, owned by an investment company. Post-lockdown, the return of outside guests to the resort causes some in the village to take their anger out by destroying a hot-tum on the property, inadvertently exposing the remains of Ailsa, her body buried below its base.


The story is told, in the third person, by Greg Taylor, the head gamekeeper at the estate, and his new girlfriend, Joanne Addington, newly arrived from London. Greg and Joanne have only recently met, he a little taken aback by her acceptance of his invitation to come to Blackrig. Both, it quickly becomes clear, have something to hide, Greg feeling guilty for what he sees as his part in introducing the virus into the village, Joanne hiding from something, or someone, back in London. But do either, or both, of them have deeper secrets to hide?


Lin Anderson draws very realistic relatable characters. Both main characters are flawed, are hiding things from each other. The newness of their relationship and their, understandable though frustrating, reluctance to share their thoughts, leads to tension between them. The arrival of Greg’s egotistic boss and of the police investigating Ailsa’s death intensifies the tension. Greg, with all of the men who were in the village when Ailsa disappeared, is once again under suspicion. His tendency to lose his temper makes Joanne question the speed in which they became entangled, as does Greg’s ex’s obvious dislike of her.


The book is very evocative of the highlands near Inverness. Lin Anderson perfectly captures the uniqueness of remote communities and the wariness towards outsiders. THE PARTY HOUSE is one of the first novels I have read to describe the devastating impact of Covid 19, the effects continuing even as the village emerges from lockdown measures. The book is thrilling, the tension slowly building to a stunning conclusion. I enjoyed it tremendously and look forward to exploring the author’s Scotland set Rhona MacCloud series of crime novels.




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Lin Anderson is a Scottish author and screenwriter known for her bestselling crime series featuring forensic scientist Dr Rhona MacCloud. Four of her novels have been long listed for the Scottish Crime Book of the Year, with FOLLOW THE DEAD being a 2018 finalist. Her short film River Child won both a Scottish BAFTA for Best Fiction and the Celtic Film Festival’s Best Drama Award and has now been viewed more than one million times on YouTube. Lin is also the co-founder of the international crime writing festival Bloody Scotland.






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