Synopses & Reviews
A debut novel of literary suspense when a man disappears, people are not who they seem and everyone is a suspect.
Cyrus Coddington, age nineteen, suspects that he may be a genius without a calling. He is a year-round resident of East Sooke, Vancouver Island, and has a natural resentment for the summer cottagers who descend on its rocky beaches. When two vacationing American couples arrive old friends with a complicated history they become his obsession. Greg and Nicholas are engaged in an academic collaboration that looks more like competition; Samina and Laurel are old friends who have grown apart and developed a strange jealousy. Cyrus spies on the cottagers through their windows, then begins to insinuate himself into their lives. When one of the cottagers goes missing, no one will look at any of the others the same way again.
Combining the eerie suspense of Patricia Highsmith and the literary fortitude of Ian McEwan, The Cottagers is about the discrepancy between the lives we live and the versions of those lives that trail behind us.
Review
"A subplot about Cyrus' father...seems unnaturally melded to the main plot...but it's not enough of a distraction to kill the eerie mood, which is the main attraction here. This definitely fits snugly into the Ruth Rendell and Minette Walters camp." Booklist
Review
"The role of Cyrus will never become public knowledge in a story that withholds both suspense and catharsis. A limp first novel, shallow in its characterizations and lacking narrative energy." Kirkus Reviews
Review
"This is both a suspense story and a coming-of-age novel that evaluates friendship and the consequences of isolation." Library Journal
Review
"Brilliant, spooky, and wise. It has the page-turning suspense of a thriller." Joan Silber, author of Household Words
Review
"A mesmerizing, psychologically exacting, performance, it's hard to imagine a stronger debut novel this year." Peter Ho Davies, author of Equal Love
Review
"Almost impossible to put down...shiveringly good. This is not a book you will easily forget." Susan Fromberg Schaeffer, author of The Snow Fox
Review
"An unusual and slyly surprising novel. Nasty and mesmerizing." Joy Williams, author of Honored Guest
Review
"The Cottagers is a book wise to human foibles, rich with precise and amusing observations of its characters. It cannot truly be called suspenseful despite the murder mystery plot, it is too cluttered with literary devices, ideas about what it is to know and be known by others, and the personal histories of minor characters. But then, what else do we read for?" Anna Godbersen, Esquire (read the entire Esquire review)
Synopsis
Combining the eerie suspense of Patricia Highsmith and the literary fortitude of Ian McEwan, The Cottagers is about the discrepancy between the lives we live and the versions of those lives that trail behind us.
Synopsis
A debut novel of literary suspensewhen a man disappears, people are not who they seem and everyone is a suspect.
Synopsis
Cyrus Coddington, age nineteen, suspects that he may be a genius without a calling. He is a year-round resident of East Sooke, Vancouver Island, and has a natural resentment for the summer cottagers who descend on its rocky beaches. When two vacationing American couples arriveold friends with a complicated historythey become his obsession. Greg and Nicholas are engaged in an academic collaboration that looks more like competition; Samina and Laurel are old friends who have grown apart and developed a strange jealousy. Cyrus spies on the cottagers through their windows, then begins to insinuate himself into their lives. When one of the cottagers goes missing, no one will look at any of the others the same way again.
Combining the eerie suspense of Patricia Highsmith and the literary fortitude of Ian McEwan, The Cottagers is about the discrepancy between the lives we live and the versions of those lives that trail behind us.
About the Author
Marshall N. Klimasewiskis short stories have appeared in The New Yorker, The Atlantic Monthly, Tri-Quarterly, and Best American Short Stories. He teaches creative writing at Washington University in St. Louis.