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Unspeakable Things

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Inspired by a terrifying true story from the author’s hometown, a heart-pounding novel of suspense about a small Minnesota community where nothing is as quiet—or as safe—as it seems.

Cassie McDowell’s life in 1980s Minnesota seems perfectly wholesome. She lives on a farm, loves school, and has a crush on the nicest boy in class. Yes, there are her parents’ strange parties and their parade of deviant guests, but she’s grown accustomed to them.

All that changes when someone comes hunting in Lilydale.

One by one, local boys go missing. One by one, they return changed—violent, moody, and withdrawn. What happened to them becomes the stuff of shocking rumors. The accusations of who’s responsible grow just as wild, and dangerous town secrets start to surface. Then Cassie’s own sister undergoes the dark change. If she is to survive, Cassie must find her way in an adult world where every sin is justified, and only the truth is unforgivable.

296 pages, Kindle Edition

First published January 1, 2020

27.8k people are currently reading
96.7k people want to read

About the author

Jess Lourey

49 books3,858 followers
Hi, folks! While I write across genres, there's one universal connecting all my books: secrets. I grew up in a house choking with them, and I remain fascinated by the thoughts and actions we hide from the world.

My beginnings as an author were pretty grim, something I speak about in my TEDx Talk (https://youtu.be/a5vSLh3oPXI). I've come a long way since that first book, and I'm proud to call myself an Amazon Charts bestselling, Edgar-nominated, ITW Thriller and Anthony Award-winning author of nonfiction, children's books, YA adventure, magical realism, and crime fiction. I also love to teach creative writing in international workshops.

I live in Minneapolis with a rotating batch of foster kittens (and occasional foster puppies, but man those goobers are a lot of work). Pop on over to Lourey's Literati, my VIP Reader group on Facebook, for the latest news, giveaways, and insider information: https://www.facebook.com/groups/38538...

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5 stars
23,030 (28%)
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3 stars
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Displaying 1 - 30 of 5,761 reviews
Profile Image for Nilufer Ozmekik.
2,890 reviews56.7k followers
April 1, 2022
Another disturbing, dark, nail biter story based on true events. And I loved to spend time at Cassie’s head and seeing events at 80’s Minnesota from her eyes. She was thirteen, smart, mature from her peers, a little quirky (but in an adorable way), coming from not so wealthy and dysfunctional family, dealing with his mostly drunk, artistic father’s mood swings and anger management problems as her mother acts like they’re perfect and exampled family and nothing is wrong about them.

They’re living in a small community. Everybody knows everybody and their most of the secrets. But the small community’s life ruined with disappearance of string of local boys. Is it Peeping Tom as the school children gossiped about or is it a real dangerous hunter coming for boys?

Do you love the dark, ominous, nerve bending atmosphere and heart throbbing stories with smart, riveting narration? If your answer is a strong : “Yessss!, this book fits for your expectations.

It’s gripping, it’s intriguing and at some parts it was compelling to read the things Cassie had to witness and endure. But it was mostly quick page-turner, even though the heavy and creepy stuffs in the book made me a little irritated and gave me several jumps at my seat. I ended up sitting cross legged on the floor and consumed more wine that I can stomach. It was not stressful, agitating journey!

A quick warning: If you’re dissatisfied with the haphazard ending of the book. There’s epilogue was pulled out before the release. Please visit the ww.jesslourey.com and request your epilogue so you get more satisfying answers and closure about the characters’ future stories.

Overall: I loved Cassie and I loved eerie, complex, captivating writing style. Only thing I didn’t like was the ending but as soon as I checked the website, that problem is also solved. I wished the author or publishers wouldn’t pull out this part of the book. But I mostly enjoyed more than I expected.

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Profile Image for jessica.
2,626 reviews46.5k followers
January 13, 2021
once i read this was based on a real crime that happened in the authors hometown, a crime that was the inspiration for the podcast ‘in the dark,’ i was sold.

unfortunately, the story is more about cassie, who happens to live in a town where something strange is happening, rather than the focus being on the abducted boys. the bulk majority of the novel focuses on cassies home life, her unstable father, and how she copes with everything hes involved in (which is a lot). so its not a plot driven story, but rather character driven. its interesting if you enjoy small town domestic drama stories (it kind of reminded me of the first season of bates motel), but sadly, that wasnt quite what i was looking for when i picked this up.

however, i started listening to ‘in the dark’ and have found it much more captivating. for those of you who like true crime podcasts, you can listen to it here.

3 stars
Profile Image for MarilynW.
1,687 reviews3,988 followers
January 11, 2020
Cassie McDowell is a twelve year old girl living in rural Minnesota in the 1980s, daughter of well educated, but poor, free living, hippy-ish parents. You might think that she and her older sister had a blessed life, but there are bad things happening to boys in her area and bad things happening in her own home. Cassie lives in fear of her dad coming up the stairs to her room at night, something she tries to fend off by writing stories in her diary. And Cassie and the entire town are concerned that boys are going missing, only to show up again, having been molested by a masked man. Rumors are rampant but because the boys are from the poorest side of town, next to nothing it being done about the abuse to the boys. Then finally, a boy from the rich part of town goes missing and things start to heat up. 

Things really aren't much better at Cassie's house. Her parents hold parties where anything goes and they don't even try to hide it from their daughters. Both girls are told they can never speak of what goes on at home, because other people won't "understand". Smart, creative Cassie is living a nightmare but not able to reach out to anyone about it. She decides to solve the mystery of who is kidnapping and molesting her schoolmates but she fears even those crimes may be way closer to home than just in her neighborhood. Her father's ever changing moods rule the household and there are so many secrets, including what happens in their dirt basement. 

While this might be a coming of age story, it is for sure a tension filled thriller. Every day and especially, every night, of Cassie's life, is spent in fear of the monster who is may come up the stairs and the monster who is taking young boys. Cassie's mom won't put a stop to what happens at home and in fact, turns a blind eye to it. Cassie's sister is acting out, dealing with everything in the most dysfunctional of ways. I felt for all the children, even those that take to striking out at those weaker than them, because they are trapped in a world that puts what side of town one lives in, over actual crimes that need investigating. 

This was a Kindle First Read choice. 
Profile Image for Michelle .
1,033 reviews1,804 followers
January 22, 2020
1980's Lilydale, Minnesota

Twelve year old Cassie and her older sister Sephie grew up poor with an artist father and their mother, the sole provider, a teacher. Their world is rocked when boys in their neighborhood begin getting attacked by a man in a mask. These victims aren't the same after and Cassie wants to solve the mystery and catch the attacker.

The yuck factor in this book was a bit too much for me and that has nothing to do with the boys being attacked. Are swingers and sex parties really necessary to tell this story? Also, the culprit really comes as no surprise.

Anyhoo, what really pissed me off is the ending. Or the lack of one. Apparently the author decided to leave out the epilogue in favor of readers forming their own opinion. You can access the epilogue via her website to get some sort of resolution. This was an arc that was provided to me for free but had I of purchased this book I would have been really angry that I now have to go to her website to be provided the ending in which I already paid for. I hope they change this before publication. 2 stars!

Thank you to NetGalley and and Thomas & Mercer for providing me with a digital ARC in exchange for my honest review.
Profile Image for Lawyer.
384 reviews944 followers
January 2, 2020
It is rare that I write a full review these days. I am conscious of all I wish to read yet. The clock is ticking. I am conscious of growing older. I am well aware that time is not regained. Why this review?

This title was an Amazon Prime First Read. It carries a Goodreads rating of 3.76. It deserves neither.

Perhaps this will keep you from wasting your time in reading this book. It is tragically over written. While the subject matter is so significant--child abuse and exploitation--the author exhibits inadequate knowledge of the problem. Worse, Lourey shows she performed any research on the topic, though material sources have consistently multiplied since the 1980s. Rather, Lourey cites a single podcast related to a single case involving the abduction of an eleven year old boy whose body was boot discovered till 27 years later.

What allow me to offer such open criticism of this book? I was a career prosecutor for close to 28 years. More than 20 years I specialized in the investigation and prosecution of child abuse cases, physical and sexual. I received training across the nation. And became a trainer of other professionals assigned to present these cases.

Lourey blends offender types, both opportunistic and fixated, as interchangeable types. They are not. Lourey has a worried town pointing fingers at stereotypified offenders.

For one example of a novel worthy of its subject matter I recommend Bastard Out of Carolina by Dorothy Allison. For one novel involving the random act of the offender unknown to his victim I recommend The Prince of Tides by Pat Conroy.

For those interested in reference titles to offenders and victims of child abuse, a multitude of the most recent studies are readily found online.

What a disappointing book on which to begin the New Year.
Profile Image for daph pink ♡ .
1,129 reviews3,165 followers
January 27, 2022
3.25⭐

I finished this book a month ago I guess so I don't remember much , because it was a pretty basic read though I remember one thing , the book is very personal for the author as it is inspired from her own childhood , the fictional story was sort of her way to express that events from her childhood so that was intersting in itself and that was the only factor which compelled me to read it apart from being a small town mystery with dysfunctional families and kids.

The writing was solid and intriguing , there is this constant sense of suspense where you want to know what's happening and you just want to finish it to know the truth.

It was quite painful to read because the subject dealt was quite dark and touching like you might have guessed from the title.

Now there are a few things I disliked about this book , like the extremely slow pacing . I felt it was like ripping off a bit while I was reading it where you can't decide whether you want to go slow or fast but you weirdly wanna see what's underneath it and I dislike that feeling it's like I am only reading it because I want to finish it and I am not enjoying the storyline .

Lot of things went unsaid , that you are waiting to be resolved and nothing really happens by the end and there are story notches that weren't completed and I found then really frustrating and this wasn't an open ending at all.

I don't think I will recommend this not because it's bad but because my thoughts are quite polarising about this book right now.

TW:- sexual assault, child abuse, verbal abuse, homophobic slurs , bullying.
Profile Image for Kelli Wilson.
575 reviews168 followers
April 21, 2020
Wow. This is really dark folks. Pretty disturbing things happening. And somehow the way the words are written gripped me and I needed to finish it out. I'm glad I did.

FYI: The author did not include the epilogue in the book itself. It is available only on her website: http://jessicalourey.com/survey-two
Profile Image for Jaidee.
723 reviews1,445 followers
March 2, 2022
3.33 "promising, could have nailed it" stars !!

The Shoulda Woulda Coulda Award of 2021


Thank you to Netgalley, the author as well as Thomas & Mercer for an e-copy. This was released January 2020. I am providing my honest review.

This could have been a home run or at least a very strong triple play.

Ms. Lourey writes the most compelling popular fiction prose that is vivid, sharp and easy to read. In this novel, we are taken to rural Minnesota in the 1980s and enter the inner and outer world of Cassandra who is twelve years old and living in a highly dysfunctional family environment where she feels unsafe as well as struggling with peer friendships, crushes and losing her older sister who is acting out sexually. Mother is distant but caring and father is volatile and lecherous.

Boys from school are being sexually assaulted by a masked assailant and Cass' fear as well as curiousity grow and continually bring her close to danger.

The first two thirds of the book are easily 4 star excellent with a realistic and evocative portrayal of what it is like to be an intelligent poor rural girl in Minnesota. The depictions of life and character are extremely realistic yet noirishly frightening. The dialogue and behaviors of the children zing and sing and we are pulled deeper and deeper into murky waters with villainous adults and the constraints of living in poverty. There is both a coming of age and noirish feel to the novel.

HOWEVER, at the the two thirds mark the author loses her grip on her excellence and our 12 year old starts to have the wisdom and werewithal of a person at least double her age. She embarks on Nancy Drew investigations and makes deductions that left me incredulous and my eyes would roll over and over again. The prose remained excellent but the execution became sloppy and from hyperealism we move into mild melodrama and horror. That was SO NOT COOL ! I rate the last third a paltry 2 stars.

I am very impressed with the first two thirds and so I will remain hopeful as I also have another book by this author and I am looking forward to reading it !!

Profile Image for NZLisaM.
539 reviews595 followers
January 11, 2021
In the summer of 1983, ‘evil’ exists in the small farming community of Lilydale, Minnesota. Boys are being abused by an unknown, almost supernatural, sexual predator, but the police and adults are not convinced he exists. 12-year-old Cassie McDowell is certain he does though. She already believes in monsters, lives in constant fear of her alcoholic, paranoid, domineering father, and his various mood swings, and dreads the ‘parties’ her parents sometimes throw. The boys who've been ‘taken' return angry and withdrawn, and Cassie has recently witnessed the same changes in her older sister Sephie. Cassie’s determined to help the boys of Lilydale, so she begins her own investigation to unmask his identity, and seek justice.

Unspeakable Things is drama, abuse, tragedy, crime, suspense, 1980’s nostalgia/pop culture, small town life, first crush, friendship, school life, childlike experiences of summer, and coming-of-age all rolled into one. It goes without saying that there are some graphic passages relating to both Cassie's home life and the sexual abuse of her classmate's, but the focus is on her fight or flight responses, the emotional and physical toll, and psychological effects of growing up in a dysfunctional family environment. Like most 12 year olds on the cusp of teenagehood, Cassie’s main goals are to act normal (at least outwardly) and fit in, and hang out, with her peers, and a large part of the plot centers around this. Due to the age and innocence of the narrator, some of what's going on around Cassie goes over her head, or is too traumatic for her to even think about or give voice to, therefore some of the more disturbing themes are barely touched on, or occur offsite. I'm loath to encourage anyone to read this if the topics are likely triggering, but as a regular reader of crime thrillers I've read a lot worse than this, particularly in police procedurals.

In her author's note Jess Lourey mentions that even though this novel is based on real people and events – in particular the abduction and murder of Jacob Wetterling in 1989, and the kidnapping of boys in the midwest in the mid-to-late 80’s – the story, and Lilydale are entirely products of her imagination.

Our heroine Cassie is incredibly resilient, strong, and brave. She stands up to her father as much as she can, never excuses or condones his actions, continuously begs her mother to leave him, reaches out to her aunt for help, protects her sister from her father's wrath, and is determined to bring down the person attacking vulnerable boys in her community. She is very intelligent, and often uses wit and imagination as coping mechanisms She's let down by the majority of the grown-ups surrounding her as they have a tendency to be corrupt, enablers, oblivious, scared, weak, choose not to get involved, or outright monsters. There are some good, kind adults to be found, but like most victims of abuse, Cassie has been continuously told that she won't be believed if she tells.

The close of the novel is deliberately left open ended and up to your own interpretation, and after re-reading the prologue again once I'd finished, I concluded it completely worked for me. However, for those who need more of a resolution there is an Epilogue on the author's website. I waited a day before reading it, and even though it was satisfying and gave me all the remaining answers, I think I prefer the ending as is.

Unspeakable Things has shot straight to the top five of my favourites list for the year.
Profile Image for Henny.
203 reviews132 followers
December 18, 2020
The title pretty much sums up the book perfectly: everything is implied rather than clearly said out loud one damn time.
The adults are all shady af and their behavior is fucked up to say the least.
The main character(s)? Unlikable and irritating.
The plot is practically nonexistent and includes a bunch of irrelevant scenes.
The ending? A joke. Also, btw, just publish your book with the ending you want and don't publish the real ending separately.
Profile Image for Kristi Lamont.
1,946 reviews66 followers
December 1, 2019
Wow was this a really good book about some truly disturbing things. Got it as an Amazon First Read so I went into it with low expectations; whipped through it in a couple of hours this afternoon. Realized as I was getting toward the end that I was thirsty, I needed to go to the bathroom, my jaws were locked and my fingers were clenching my iPad very, very hard. The sense of foreboding Ms Lourey had going on was something else. No way in the world was I getting out of my chair until I got to the end.

I wish Netflix or somebody would make this into a series. I see Woody Harrelson as one of the main characters. If you read the book, tell me your guess as to which one in the comments, not gonna do a spoiler here.

Oh, one more thing: I'm quite sure part of the reason I really liked this book is because it was told from the perspective of a female adolescent in the early 1980s. I would've been I guess five years older than her then, more like her sister's age, but could still totally relate to SO many things (hot rollers and Farrah Fawcett hair, anyone?). But thank GOD I've never had to butcher a chicken.

Profile Image for Ceecee.
2,546 reviews2,142 followers
January 1, 2023
Just couldn’t get into this one.
Profile Image for Frank Phillips.
611 reviews305 followers
February 24, 2021
3.45 Stars. I absolutely loved our teenage protagonist, Cassie, and empathized for her as she endured the horrific circumstances at home. I did feel that the pacing may have been a bit slow at times, and perhaps the author focused a tad more on developing the characters and illustrating the insane hardships Cassie endured at home, on account of her crazy swinger parents, specifically her alcoholic pervy father. While this was very nicely done and really had me invested in her as a character, I felt that the serial rapist / murderer storyline suffered and it felt as though it was almost added more as a backstory, when I went in anticipating it as the primary storyline. All of that being said this was still a very solid read that I believe most will enjoy. If I had to, I would categorize it as a YA suspense/thriller. I definitely am very intrigued about the true story this was based off (which is most likely the creepiest thing about all of it!) of, and will be doing my research and reading about it asap! I have purchased bloodline, this author's subsequent release, and look forward to reading it. Onto my next great '21 read!!
Profile Image for Chandra Claypool (WhereTheReaderGrows).
1,745 reviews356 followers
January 2, 2020
For some reason, I glanced at this book yesterday and almost set it aside as one I'd get to later, if I had time. But then something kept drawing me to it and after picking it up and putting it down a few times, something about it just called to me and I decided to pick this up.... and once I did, I didn't put it down until I was done reading. So if you have this on your shelf anywhere, I recommend you don't pass this one up and READ IT ASAP.

I love novels based on true stories. As this one is told through Cassie's eyes, a 12-turning-13 year old girl in the 80s, I understood every single reference and remember all the stories of Chester the Molester and when letting your kids roam the streets on their bikes was still safe.. until it wasn't. I also remember being that age where everything frightened you and yet you were also fearless. Cassie was this girl. Innocent and yet aware of all the weird things going on around her - whether within her own family or around her otherwise. She becomes her own Nancy Drew and wants to figure out what's going on with these kidnapped boys... especially when the one that doesn't come back is the one in her romantic mind she was destined to marry.

I absolutely adore that the entire novel is straight through Cassie. You instantly feel a connection with her. And all the little clues keep you wondering, with her, as to who the suspects are and what possible motives there might be. You see her grow (faster than she needs to be at that age).

I will say, I understand why the ending was the way that it was.... but I was left feeling a little want... luckily, I saw @novelgossip's review and she mentioned you could get the epilogue so AFTER you've read the book, if you need some answers like I did, google Unspeakable Things Epilogue. Even with the slight abrupt ending, I can't give this book less than the five stars I think it deserves. I'll be thinking about this one for a while.
Profile Image for Amy.
2,400 reviews1,977 followers
January 1, 2020
Unspeakable Things is out today and man you guys, this one was such a different read from the type of book I’ve been gravitating towards lately. It’s a mix between a coming of age story and suspense and is set in 1980’s Minnesota and follows a thirteen year old girl named Cassie. She lives in a small town and suddenly a string of local boys start to disappear, but most of them return quickly. They’re all changed and haunted by whatever happened while they were gone and Cassie is terrified by what’s going on in her town. Terrifying, right? It’s also inspired by true events making it all the more creepy!

This one went super dark, and had an overall sense of foreboding, hints of menace and just the general feeling that something was off. I found it to be atmospheric and eerie and really emotional all at the same time. It almost had a literary feel to it as the author has a beautiful way with words and the angst and emotional turmoil Cassie was facing added so much depth and heartbreak to a really gripping story.

The ending of this wasn’t my favorite, I was disappointed until I found out the author had originally written an epilogue then decided to pull it before publication. She has it up on her website and after reading it and getting some more firm answers I was satisfied. Don’t read it first though, there are huge spoilers for the book. Other than that minor gripe that was easily resolved for me I really enjoyed this one.
Profile Image for Vonda.
318 reviews153 followers
February 24, 2020
This book sorely disappointed me. Based on a true story, it was only about a third of the book. The crimes weren't really revealed and whodunit was easy to figure out. 2/3rds of this book was way over descriptive sentences where the author fancied herself witty. It took me far too long to read this book, dragging myself along and honestly for the synapsis it was boring. Do not recommend.
Profile Image for Shelby Dawson.
574 reviews24 followers
December 9, 2019
Yet another Kindle First book with a ton of five star ratings that leave me feeling very confused.

This wasn't terrible but between the writing style and the way a lot of things didn't add up to the (much too fast imo) conclusion I just don't see how this is anything more than sub par.

Profile Image for Natasha | natashainyourphone.
379 reviews62 followers
December 5, 2019
3.5 stars. I devoured this book in two days.

Young boys in Cassie's small town are being molested and she doesn't think the police are doing enough to solve this mystery. The innocent 13 year old has her own handful of suspects - the creepy police chief, her gay band teacher, the scary man called the Goblin, as well as her own father.

This story is pretty dark and disturbing - molestation, incest, swinger parties, etc. and it's all told through Cassie and her innocence. A lot of the bad stuff is implied and covered by Cassie calling it gross.

I loved Cassie as the main character. She's a child and some of her thoughts are juvenile, but I loved it. I loved the suspense throughout the entire book. I was constantly switching who I thought the molester was and was curious about the entire town in general.

The reason for the 3.5 star rating is because of the ending. I didn't feel like it addressed all the questions that were raised and the ending seemed rushed.

I would still recommend this book to people because the suspense had me hooked, but I'd give fair warning that not all your questions will be answered and there is a lot of vagueness where you have to fill in the blanks.

EDIT: Jess Lourey has released an epilogue. She said she wanted readers to form their own ending so she left the epilogue out of the book. Here is the link to the epilogue: http://jessicalourey.com/survey-two it contains spoilers so don't read it until you're done with the book. I thought about raising my rating, but I'm not going to.
Profile Image for Sheila Beaumont.
1,102 reviews170 followers
January 13, 2020
This is a creepy, well-written account of the perverse goings-on behind the wholesome facade of a small town in Minnesota. The tale is narrated by a 12-year-old girl, but this is definitely not a children's book. This horrific story is based on real events from the author's childhood.
153 reviews
December 2, 2019
Okay but not great

Some things just didn't fit. And what Haiti the dad? And what had the dad done? And were there other victims? What did she mean about what if I had eaten strawberries? Some stuff just didn't make sense.
Profile Image for Nenia ✨ I yeet my books back and forth ✨ Campbell.
Author 59 books20.8k followers
December 30, 2021

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Wow! It's been a while since a book made me so uncomfortable. Jess Lourey writes thrillers set in the 80s that take a decidedly unglamorous look at the decade that everyone loves to fetishize. In UNSPEAKABLE THINGS, she doesn't shirk from portraying how secrets can fester in close-knit communities, and how people could casually be racist and homophobic while also facilitating creeps of all kinds and flavors with the patriarchal sexism that was kind of embedded in society at the time and taken as the status quo.



After reading the author's other book, LITANI, which is about cults, I was excited to read this book with my friend, Heather, who is the person who pointed me towards this author in the first place (thank you thank you). The book is narrated by thirteen-year-old Cassie who is excited about high school and just living her best life, but that joy of growing up is tarnished by her creepy alcoholic father and an even creepier pervert who is raping and molesting kids in her town. Rumors abound and there's no shortage of suspects, and the real horror may be closer to home than anyone would like.



Lourey did such a good job making me worry about Cassie and her sister, Sephie. Through Cassie's naive eyes, we see a town that is suspicious of outsiders but also way too forgiving of its own townsfolk's sins. I have no trouble believing that small towns in the 80s really were like this. You hear so many #MeToo stories from people who were the victims of those that people never held accountable and were sometimes permitted to operate in plain sight. A story like this easily could have felt exploitative or done for shock value, but I was relieved that the author went light on the details.



I'm giving it a three star rating because there were things I really liked but the pacing felt off and I wasn't quite as engaged with the narrator as I would have liked to be. I agree with Heather, who said that this story felt more polished in some ways, but I think I liked the story and the creep factor of LITANI better, even though it did end up being more predictable. I don't know, I just kind of vibe with a creepy cult tale. Some people will probably find this book very triggering, so please keep in mind that child sexual abuse is a theme of this book, as well as scenes depicting grooming and threatening behaviors. I would also disagree that this is YA. Even though the narrator is a kid, I feel like the tone and the story are very much adult in theme and geared towards adults.



Jess Lourey might be one of my favorite new discoveries of the year. All of her books feel like episodes of some sort of horrific TV show that could be called "Why 80s Minnesota Sucks." I'm two for two so far in liking what I've read by her, and I can't wait to see what other thrillers she has under her belt.



3 to 3.5 stars
Profile Image for Lisa.
238 reviews35 followers
October 16, 2024
UNSPEAKABLE THINGS by Jess Lourey, who is quickly becoming a favorite author, is a dark thriller that was inspired by actual events from the author’s home-state of Minnesota during the 1980s. This coming-of-age novel follows (almost) 13-year-old Cassie McDowell as she navigates her heartbreakingly troubled family life in a small-town plagued by unsettling secrets. The narrative is driven by Cassie’s observations of disturbing occurrences in both her own dysfunctional family, as well as her neighborhood, where a series of abductions of local boys leave a plethora of suspects and a glimpse into long-held ominous secrets.

The story is so much more than a novel of suspense—it is story that explores poignant themes of trauma and lost innocence from the unique perspective of our young narrator, Cassie. The author’s depiction of the emotionally and psychologically troubled life within Cassie’s household perfectly parallels the sinister occurrences in the town of Lilydale. Jess Lourey also does a fantastic job of writing from the perspective of a thirteen-year-old girl, whose courage, loyalty, strength, and intelligence bely her young age. Highly recommend!!
Profile Image for astarion's bhaal babe (wingspan matters).
893 reviews4,724 followers
February 13, 2022
“Don’t go in there. Basements are where men hide their secrets.”



⚠️ this book contains some problematic and possibly triggering elements. make sure to check out the trigger warning list you can find at the bottom of this review, under the spoiler tag, before you get into it. ⚠️

I'm completely speechless and I wish I could analyze this book in an objective way, but it touched topics that are painful for a mom's heart and it hit so close to home with its heavy themes and I'm afraid I'll just end up babbling about everything but this book, instead of giving you an honest opinion.
Unspeakable Things is a harsh story that requires a good stomach and a solid heart; it's a difficult book, meaning that it's difficult not to feel it in your soul.
I read this is based on a true story, but I couldn't find it in me to go and look for just how true this is because the things that happen in this book are simply terrifying.
I felt for poor Cassie and her sister who were forced to shut down their fears and truths, I felt for all those boys who were too helpless to escape a situation that's unfortunately still too much of a reality.
I paradoxically wish I didn't have to get to know about Lourey's talent through a story like this one, because her flowy and impactful writing was overcomed by the shock of the narrated content, and I also gotta give credit to the narrator Caitlin Kelly for giving young Cassie a voice that sounded both naive and mature at the same.

This is definitely the kind of book that people don't necessarily need to like to appreciate.

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Profile Image for Darcia Helle.
Author 30 books724 followers
December 11, 2019
Unspeakable Things is dark, intense, and so well written that it hurts to read this story.

The entire novel is written from 12-year-old Cassie's perspective, but this is absolutely not a YA novel. I almost didn't get this book because I'm not a big fan of child narrators. Fortunately for me, the premise was too tempting to pass up. Within a few paragraphs, I was hooked. By the end of the first chapter, I couldn't imagine this story being told from any other character's perspective. By the end, I was a ragged knot of emotions.

A version of this story played out in the author's hometown decades ago. Another version is probably playing out somewhere else right now. Maybe knowing this makes Cassie's story more powerful and heartbreaking. Or maybe what hits me hardest is knowing that many of us, at some point in our lives, are side characters to Cassie's starring role, and like those in this book, we choose to look away.
Profile Image for Natasha Niezgoda.
874 reviews240 followers
October 8, 2020
WELL, UM. YEAH. SIGH. HM

description

Sooooo, you know when you took your first shot of vodka and you were like “HOLY SHIT HOW DOES ANYONE DRINK THIS?!” And then 2 years later you’re like, “Lemme try again, it’s probs not so bad!” But then, alas it is THAT bad.

description

Yeah... that’s this book.

So Unspeakable Things is a fictional crime novel inspired-by-true-events that occurred in a small town in Minnesota. It’s the 80s, there’s a lot of swingers, and then some really shitty stuff starts happening to elementary and middle school kids.

As the plot is concerned, it’s intriguing. It read like a kid’s perspective retelling of everything that was going down. But you know what also happens when you’re writing from a kid’s POV - a lot of curiosity and when a majority of that curiosity goes unresolved imma start feeling like it’s a phone that keeps on ringing and then imma ask: “Are you gonna answer that?!” 👀

And honestly, I think the author KNEW THIS because she ended up publishing a supplemental epilogue on her website. WHICH COULD HAVE BEEN GREAT... but, guess what?

It wasn’t!

description

It yielded every cliche ending to this series of events. This person got a slap on the wrist. That person moved on. This person got into substance abuse. And then some of the characters whose credibility were assassinated in the book didn’t even get mentioned‼️

So yeah, I go back mere grunts for this book. It was eh, okay. I truly expected more out of a based-on-true-events because then you can focus more on coloring in the gaps instead of creating more BUT WHAT DO I KNOW! This just gets 3 stars from me ⭐️⭐️⭐️.
Profile Image for Annika Martin.
Author 62 books3,389 followers
November 6, 2019
This book is emotional and intense and just so compelling - I was flipping those pages like mad with my heart in my throat. It's out of my normal genre to read, but OMG so grateful I got an early copy. Beautifully written. Definite winner.
Profile Image for Ruthy lavin.
453 reviews
January 22, 2020
Being an 80’s kid, I always love it when I read a book set in that era which is so wonderfully visionary that it takes me right back to being 10 again - it happened when I read ‘stand by me’ and ‘It’ and again when I watched the wonderful Netflix series ‘stranger things’.
This book gave me those same feelings and more.
It is wonderful.
A sad story based loosely on true events, the narrative is stunning. I felt like I was by Cassie’s side throughout the whole story.
I would have awarded it 5 stars but I felt the ending was unnecessarily rushed and could have been better.
This was one of those books that I didn’t want to end, and like Stand by me, it’s worthy of being adapted for film.
It’s already back on the pile to be read again.
A truly fantastic read.
Profile Image for PinkAmy loves books, cats and naps .
2,582 reviews249 followers
March 10, 2022
Summer of 1983, boys in Cassie’s small town are being molested by a stranger in a mask. The almost thirteen year old has a number of suspects, her gay music teacher, the scary man kids call Goblin, the creepy police chief, even her own father.

UNSPEAKABLE THINGS drew me in with Cassie’s wise, yet innocent voice. Jess Lourey skillfully showed the difference between what the tween understood and what certain characters in her life were actually doing. Because of Cassie’s naïveté, Lourey skirts around some of the bigger issues going in in her home like incest and sex parties.

Lourey doesn’t shy away from the prejudices against gay men and a more conservative, judgmental small town mentality that I remember well from living in a small town in 1983 when I was nineteen. I assume she chose to set the show during the years of her own childhood, when similar kidnappings occurred. I remembered all the cultural references Lourey threw in the mix to remind readers of the era.

The plot of UNSPEAKABLE THINGS is dreary. As good as the story starts out is as bleak as it becomes, and not because the story is dark. Cassie’s father, drunk and inappropriately sexual, controlling and erratic was much more awful than she realized (not a spoiler, readers will pick this up from the beginning). Her mom didn’t have her back, suffering under her own learned helplessness.

UNSPEAKABLE THINGS uneven pace seemed to have a lot of scene fillers than didn’t advance plot or characters. I didn’t feel any tension in the story although I didn’t guess the perp, though he was among the handful of people I suspected at one point during the story.

The ending of UNSPEAKABLE THINGS made me glad the book wasn’t longer. I didn’t feel much else.
Profile Image for Bam cooks the books.
2,186 reviews290 followers
February 22, 2020
*3.5 stars rounded up.

Inspired by the disappearance of young boys in a small Minnesotan town in the 1980s, this thriller is decidedly dark and creepy. The story's protagonist is 12-year-old Cassandra McDowell. Having the story told from her perspective often leaves the reader frustrated because the girl can't quite decipher what is happening in the mysterious world of adults.

Cass is the youngest of two daughters in a very dysfunctional family. She and her sister have always been told that what goes on at home must remain secret. Tell no one. Although it seems most of the community knows what goes on at the McDowell's summer parties.

Our first clue that's there's something really bad here is that Cass spends every night hiding in her closet or under her bed.

But she is a bright girl and determined to figure out who is molesting young boys in town. Is it the gay music teacher, the creepy neighbor, the sheriff? Or could it be her own dad? Why won't he let them go into the basement?

The tension builds and builds to a dramatic conclusion that I quite appreciated. While I'd classify this as a 'coming of age' story, it is definitely for adults, not ya, due to its subject matter.

I received an arc of this thriller from the publisher via NetGalley in exchange for my honest opinions. Many thanks.
Profile Image for Amy.
162 reviews20 followers
February 9, 2020
My favorite book of 2019!!

I had downloaded this book and read just 7% at first and I knew it was going to be a fantastic story. I picked it up and read until 7:30am and it was the best all-nighter I've ever had! This story IMO seems so urgent and important for many reasons. I had to make sure the characters in the book were going to be okay. My heart broke for all the kids that were taken by the town creeper and I couldn't wait to solve the mystery. I absolutely loved the author's writing style! I could see the surroundings and smell the air and taste the foods, ect. Some of her sentences are so beautifully written that I would reread them 3 or 4 times. I had the biggest goosebumps and cried at the ending! This is definitely my pick for best book of 2019! I will buy anything and everything she writes! I also wanted to add that my absolute favorite hero is Mighty Isis and this is the very first book that I've read that mentions the Isis from the old TV show! I love all the details that made me remember the good old days of being a kid.
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