By: Taylor Adams
Genres: Thriller Psychological | Thriller Domestic
Posted: February 1, 2019
Darby Thorne's mother has horrible timing. She would choose to be dying of pancreatic cancer in Utah just as a blizzard blows through the Rockies, trapping Darby on top of a mountain pass overnight.
I don't know if author Taylor Adams intentionally chose NO EXIT for this book's title, the same title as Sartre's existential work from the 20th century. But the two certainly contain the same central idea: hell is other people.
In Darby's case, the people in question are four fellow stranded motorists sheltering at the Wanashono rest stop in Colorado. As Adams makes sure to tell the reader several times, Wanashono translates to "big devil" in a Native American dialect.
And who might the big devil be in this story? There's not much mystery about it. In an unsuccessful quest for cell service, Darby stumbles past a van in the parking lot. The flashlight on her phone illuminates -- for the briefest moment -- a tiny hand reaching through bars in the back. Process of elimination quickly reveals who the driver -- and thus kidnapper -- must be.
What was going to be an inconvenient night quickly becomes life-or- death. How can Darby rescue the child when her '94 Civic can't even get out of the parking lot? And who, if anyone, can she trust to help her?
This thriller feels like Stephen King for millennials. All the same horrors are hidden in human nature (lying, scheming, violence), plus the added weirdness of being a young person today. I'm as tied to my iPhone as anyone else. What would I do if I were stranded somewhere in bad weather? I'd call for help, I'd search for the nearest town, I'd Google survival tips. In this story, one of the scariest specters is that of Darby's dying phone battery. She has (of course) forgotten her charger at home in her haste.
There was something else timely about reading NO EXIT in January 2018: the resonances with the story of Jayme Closs were hard to ignore. Just like Jayme, Jay (even the names are similar) is taken, hidden away, never far from civilization but utterly to break into it.
Truly, hell is other people.
Book Summary
A brilliant, edgy thriller about four strangers, a blizzard, a kidnapped child, and a determined young woman desperate to unmask and outwit a vicious psychopath.
A kidnapped little girl locked in a stranger’s van. No help for miles. What would you do?
On her way to Utah to see her dying mother, college student Darby Thorne gets caught in a fierce blizzard in the mountains of Colorado. With the roads impassable, she’s forced to wait out the storm at a remote highway rest stop. Inside are some vending machines, a coffee maker, and four complete strangers.
Desperate to find a signal to call home, Darby goes back out into the storm . . . and makes a horrifying discovery. In the back of the van parked next to her car, a little girl is locked in an animal crate.
Who is the child? Why has she been taken? And how can Darby save her?
There is no cell phone reception, no telephone, and no way out. One of her fellow travelers is a kidnapper. But which one?
Trapped in an increasingly dangerous situation, with a child’s life and her own on the line, Darby must find a way to break the girl out of the van and escape.
But who can she trust?
With exquisitely controlled pacing, Taylor Adams diabolically ratchets up the tension with every page. Full of terrifying twists and hairpin turns, No Exit will have you on the edge of your seat and leave you breathless.
by: Taylor Adams
William Morrow
January 1, 2019
On Sale: January 15, 2019
Featuring:
352 pages
ISBN: 0062875655
EAN: 9780062875655
Kindle: B07B7MCM7G
Hardcover / e-Book