The Quarry Girls
A Thriller
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Narrated by:
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Jess Nahikian
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By:
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Jess Lourey
About this listen
One of Audible's Best of 2022
Killers hiding in plain sight. Small-town secrets. A girl who knows too much. From the Amazon Charts bestselling author of Unspeakable Things and Bloodline comes a nerve-twisting novel inspired by a shocking true crime.
Minnesota, 1977. For the teens of one close-knit community, summer means late-night swimming parties at the quarry, the county fair, and venturing into the tunnels beneath the city. But for two best friends, it’s not all fun and games.
Heather and Brenda have a secret. Something they saw in the dark. Something they can’t forget. They’ve decided to never tell a soul. But their vow is tested when their friend disappears—the second girl to vanish in a week. And yet the authorities are reluctant to investigate.
Heather is terrified that the missing girls are connected to what she and Brenda stumbled upon that night. Desperately searching for answers on her own, she learns that no one in her community is who they seem to be. Not the police, not the boys she met at the quarry, not even her parents. But she can’t stop digging because she knows those girls are in danger.
She also knows she’s next.
©2022 Jess Lourey. (P)2022 Brilliance Publishing, Inc., all rights reserved.Critic reviews
“[The Quarry Girls is] one of the most anticipated thrillers of the fall season…[The] novel is about innocence lost, the unwritten rules of silence in small towns, what ‘broken men’ do to others, and what boys growing into men do in packs that they would never do alone. And then there’s the courage of one woman who will not allow herself to be killed.”—St. Paul Pioneer Press
“Like Unspeakable Things and Bloodline, Jess Lourey’s The Quarry Girls is ultimately a morality tale—almost a dark fairy tale except that the plots are rooted in reality and the danger is all too real. The sad fact is that there is no shortage of past crimes to prompt Jess Lourey’s creative mind, but readers can rest easy knowing that this author will approach every idea with deep reverence for the victims and a goal of providing a healing and heartfelt journey—for both the characters and their readers—within the pages of some truly exceptional crime fiction.”—BOLO Books
“Few authors can blend the genuine fear generated by a sordid tale of true crime with evocative, three-dimensional characters and mesmerizing prose like Jess Lourey. Her fictional stories feel rooted in a world we all know but also fear. The Quarry Girls is a story of secrets gone to seed, and Lourey gives readers her best novel yet—which is quite the accomplishment. Calling it: The Quarry Girls will be one of the best books of the year.”—Alex Segura, acclaimed author of Secret Identity, Star Wars Poe Dameron: Free Fall, and Miami Midnight
What listeners say about The Quarry Girls
Average customer ratingsReviews - Please select the tabs below to change the source of reviews.
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- Kindle Customer
- 26-11-22
Good read
This was a well crafted and descriptive book. Horrifyingly real, and very sad. But I do recommend reading it as it does make you think.
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2 people found this helpful
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- ms jeanie Burr
- 19-05-23
Well written and disturbing
I almost gave this up early on, as I realised it was based on real events and has sections that include narration by a kidnapped girl. While these sections and some others are disturbing, it isn’t really graphic either. I was around the age of the girls at the time this is set and the horror they experience is a partly a product of these times in small town America. They are always polite and mostly compliant, even when it puts them in danger, as it’s the code of the times. Except for one, males are all monsters and complicit with each other and the women and girls just have to live with it. The ending does suggest and end to this. I enjoyed the narration and the whispery-ness does get better. I felt that it illuminates the times well and gives some insight into young women’s lives in rural US in the ‘70s, a time that many men there seem to want to condemn women to return to.
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1 person found this helpful
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- Milly
- 10-05-23
Excellent
Really enjoyed this book. Narration was great, story great, the ending did let it down slightly, would have preferred a bit of a twist but the rest was so good that it didn’t matter too much.
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1 person found this helpful
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- Tsitsi Mhene
- 17-12-22
Whisper voice is irritating
it was very difficult for me to get into this story but it was worth it in the end. The narrator whispered the story and it was simultaneously sleep inducing and irritating.
After a slow start, the story picked up and was ultimately gripping and engrossing.
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2 people found this helpful