
15 Of The Best Books Like SHARP OBJECTS
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I think about Amy Adams’s performance in HBO’s Sharp Objects adaptation at least once a week. I suck down mysteries like they’re candy, but hardly does one stick with me the way Gillian Flynn’s debut has. Since experiencing Sharp Objects in both available mediums last summer, I’ve remained on the lookout for other stories that give me a similar feeling of creeping dread. (I never claimed to be normal, okay!) These 15 books like Sharp Objects will have you reading to the very last page in just one sitting.
Book Riot’s Amanda Nelson compared Kuehn’s dark and twisty YA novel to Sharp Objects in another post, and based on the description I’d have to agree with that assessment. Cate Henry was sent to juvenile detention for committing arson two years ago, but now she’s free—and she’s determined her brother Jamie a message.
Like Sharp Objects‘s Camille Preaker, Lane Roanoke makes a reluctant return to her grandparents’ country mansion to investigate a disappearance. The story is told in dual timelines, following teenage Lane over the course of one summer and present-day Lane as she seeks to uncover the secrets buried at Roanoke. This book gave me the same sense of foreboding I felt reading Flynn’s novel for the first time.
I love all of Tana French’s Dublin Murder Squad novels, but this is probably my favorite. Atmospheric and haunting, it explores the drama of young womanhood playing out at a boarding school that just happens to be the site of a brutal unsolved murder. As Detective Stephen Moran revisits the case based on new clues, he finds himself unpacking the complex relationships between a tightly knit group of girls.
A murder in her small Vermont hometown reminds Kate Cypher of the unsolved death of her friend Del (cruelly nicknamed “Potato Girl” by her classmates) thirty years ago. Can she find answers all these decades after the fact? Even the cover of this one gives me the creeps, if I’m being totally honest.
While not a mystery in the strict sense, the clear Manson Family cult influence infuses this beautifully written coming of age drama with Flynn-style tension. I promise that you won’t forget Evie Boyd, or Cline’s lyrical prose, anytime soon.
In short: Sisterhood is complicated.