The Lake of Lost Girls Audiobook By Katherine Greene cover art

The Lake of Lost Girls

A Novel

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The Lake of Lost Girls

By: Katherine Greene
Narrated by: Helen Laser, Frankie Corzo, Sara Young, Haley Taylor, David Bendena
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About this listen

Told in alternating timelines, The Lake of Lost Girls is a haunting novel that will thrill fans of All Good People Here and We Are All the Same in the Dark.

Using suspenseful podcast clips to weave a twisty tale of a missing student and her sister who is desperate for answers, The Lake of Lost Girls is perfect for fans of I Have Some Questions for You.

It’s 1998, and female students are going missing at Southern State University in North Carolina, but freshman Jessica Fadley, once a bright and responsible student, is going through her own struggles. Just as her life seems to be careening dangerously out of control, she suddenly disappears.

Twenty-four years later, Jessica’s sister Lindsey is desperately searching for answers and uses the momentum of a new chart-topping true crime podcast that focuses on cold cases to guide her own investigation. Soon, interest reaches fever pitch when the bodies of the long-missing women begin turning up at a local lake, which leads Lindsey down a disturbing road of discovery.

In the present, one sister searches to untangle a complicated web of lies.

In the past, the other descends ever deeper into a darkness that will lead to her ultimate fate.

This propulsive and chilling suspense is a sharp examination of sisterhood and the culture of true crime.

Story Locale: Carolina

©2024 Katherine Greene (P)2024 Dreamscape Media
Family Life Suspense Women Sleuths Exciting Student
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What listeners say about The Lake of Lost Girls

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Very unexpected twists!

Holy mind blown! Highly recommend. Great narration! Podcast style woven within the story, definitely keeps your interest!

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Absolutely incredible - shocking end

The full cast is incredible, and I love an audiobook with a podcast included within the story! As a true crime lover, sometimes it is hard for me to get into fictional crime novels because I tend to notice a lot of the mistakes the police should have caught that wouldn’t really go unnoticed in reality. However, I was fully immersed in this story and could not stop listening. I loved that the book straight up acknowledges the fact that the small town police force did not investigate the case enough when the crimes occurred. I also loved the alternating timelines and the different point of views. I especially liked how Lindsey (one of the victim’s sister and a main POV) was actually listening to the podcast that is another one of the POVs. Although I had my suspicions throughout the book on who the killer was, I did keep going back and forth as the story progressed and I was NOT ready for what we find out at the end. Definitely one of the best books I’ve read this year!

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Not bad….just a little out there

It isn’t a bad read, I just got aggravated at the ignorance and drama of one of the main characters. It had me rolling my eyes a few times. Not the best but not the worst.

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Entertaining story, awful narration

The story is interesting, not overly deep. But the narrators are wildly annoying, breathy, and dramatic in the wrong ways.

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absolutely terrible

This is a truly awful book. It's centered around a series of disappearances at a small town college, but I'm not sure the writer went to college herself because so much of the story doesn't ring true. For example, you don't receive credit or a grade when you audit a course, so there's no reason for the MC to audit the predator professor's statistics course to "save her scholarship". Also, you could not function as a college student without an ID badge for several months. And a statistics professor does not have the power to undo a student's academic suspension.

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