The Marsh King's Daughter

The Marsh King's Daughter

1999 • 322 pages

Ratings26

Average rating3.8

15

4.5 starsThis review can also be found on my blog.This is certainly one of the best thrillers I've read. There are a lot of interesting aspects of it, including a more creative take on the abduction story as well as survivalist elements. I'm a sucker for wilderness survival stories; it's so interesting to me to see how people live(d) without modern technology and resources. It also really helps me to appreciate my own life!I really loved Helena as a character; she really makes you want to root for her while also acknowledging the bad decisions she's made. She really felt fully-formed to me and this honestly felt more like a memoir than a work of fiction. The formatting also works quite well, we follow Helena through the present day as she searches for her father with relevant flashbacks that fill in the context of her earlier life.This is also one of those books that you just don't want to put down. The pacing is incredibly well-done. You're led right to the edge of a precipice and then the story pivots, jumping into the past for just long enough before finally giving you the information you're gunning for. I probably could have read this in one long sitting had I had the opportunity, and I think that would have been a breathlessly wonderful way to get through it.I highly recommend you pick this up if the plot sounds up your alley, I'm glad I finally got around to it!Blog Twitter Instagram Facebook

January 30, 2020