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Saturday, 27 June 2026

One of the Family by Mark Edwards



Description from Goodreads:

"One of the family is dead.
One of the family is missing.
And one of the family might just be the killer...

Patrick couldn’t believe his luck when Holly fell for him. She’s wickedly funny, beautiful, and with an intimidatingly successful father, Charles.

So when she invites him to Charles’ mansion for a New Year’s break in Scotland, all he’s hoping is that they’ll accept him as one of the family.

But everything feels a little off. Whispers in hallways. Rumours of a body that got found nearby the previous year. And something very strange about Charles’ new girlfriend.

Every family has secrets, and Patrick tells himself all he needs to do is survive the next few days.

But then the first body is found, and Patrick realises that all he needs to do is survive the next few days…"

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A claustrophobic and twisty trip to the Scottish Highlands

Having only read one of Mark Edwards' books before, I was really looking forward to seeing what his latest thriller would be like. His writing style hooked me last time and I am pleased to say this one kept me just as glued to the pages.

The story follows Patrick, who is heading up to a remote mansion in Scotland for a New Year's break to meet his girlfriend Holly's family for the first time. As if meeting her intimidatingly successful dad wasn't stressful enough, the siblings are all on edge because their father has just introduced his new fiancΓ©e. To make things way creepier, she is the exact same age as them and looks just like their late mother. Throw in heavy snowstorms, isolated surroundings, whispers of a frozen body found nearby and a family full of unlikable snakes, and you have the perfect recipe for total paranoia.

The opening line sets the tone well and I loved how the atmosphere builds up, making you second-guess absolutely everyone. Patrick often feels like a bit of an observer while everyone else is sniping at each other, but watching the chaos unravel around him was genuinely addictive. 

The final section gets incredibly chaotic with so many different strings of the story coming together at once. It feels a bit rushed and frantic compared to the slow-burn tension of the rest of the book, which is a minor niggle because the twists at the end definitely delivered.

Many thanks to the author, Michael Joseph, Penguin Random House and NetGalley for enabling me to read and share my thoughts of this book.

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