Monday, April 20, 2026

Riley Sagar: The House Across the Lake

Riley Sager show that spying on your neighbours may cause more trouble that it's worth and even murder:

I have read quite a few of Sagar's books and I find that they are hit or miss for me, but i seem to still keep grabbing more so I continue to give them a try. I was 100% into this book and was so curious how Sagar was going to pull the plot together and what was actually happening across the lake but then he totally took me out of it. If you have read this book you’ll know what I’m talking about and I think it is one of those things that you either love or hate. Did I see it coming, No, but after reading several books by Sagar I didn’t think his books took those turns. 

I love an unreliable narrator, whether you know they are unreliable or not. This one you know that Casey is unreliable because she is an alcoholic. She starts drinking from when she wakes up, till she passes out for the night. This plays with her perception of events and the time frame of things. More often than not the events she witnesses are from the darkness of her deck as she is watching things unfold across the lake and how one interprets the things she seems. Once again she is an alcoholic so there are times when things really can be questioned. I find it just adds something more to the story as we question what can be true and what cannot.

I enjoyed the main two timelines and it had me turning the pages pretty fast to get to where they meet as Sagar does a great job of characters in the book all could have committed a crime. You even question has a crime even been committed against Katherine as that is how well Sagar has laid out the plot of the story.

So this book was not for me in the end, but I was enjoying it up to that one point/twist in the book. So I know that I will read more books by Sager (plus I have two more on my physical TBR shelf).

Cheers!!!!
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