The Neighborhood Association from Hell
Any book that makes me accidentally skip dinner is doing something right. That's exactly what happened with The Psychopath Next Door by Mark Edwards. One minute I was planning to read a few chapters before bed. The next minute I was squinting at the clock wondering why it was dark out and why my stomach was making sounds usually associated with dying farm equipment.
The story follows Ethan Dove and his family as they attempt a fresh start after some marital turbulence. Unfortunately for Ethan, life has other plans. At about the same time they settle into their new home, Fiona moves in next door. And Fiona is not bringing banana bread to welcome the neighbors.
Recently released from prison, Fiona is carrying enough resentment to power a small city. She blames certain people for the death of her partner and the prison sentence that followed, and she has no intention of moving on peacefully.
What I liked most was that the characters felt believable. Ethan wasn't perfect. He made mistakes. Sometimes I wanted to shake him. But his decisions felt human rather than thriller filler. I wasn't entirely sure about Emma for much of the book. She kept me guessing, which may have been exactly what the author intended. By the end, though, she earned my respect. Dylan, the teenage son, mostly performed his assigned duties as Teenager™. You know the role: appear occasionally, be mildly annoyed by everything, and vanish back into the background.
Then there's Rose.
Without spoiling anything, I'll just say that Rose made me uncomfortable almost immediately. Sometimes a character walks onto the page and your instincts start waving red flags. Mine certainly did. The uncomfortable feeling wasn't accidental, either.
And Fiona was creepy from the very beginning. Not cartoon-villain creepy or twirling-a-mustache creepy. The much more unsettling kind of creepy where every appearance raises your blood pressure a little because you know something bad is coming.
The tension builds steadily throughout the book, and the twists genuinely worked for me. That's becoming harder and harder to accomplish. I've read enough thrillers that I usually spot at least part of the ending coming down the tracks.
Not this time.
Mark Edwards managed to pull the rug out from under me, and I happily face-planted right onto it. By the time I reached the final pages, I was fully invested, thoroughly surprised, and wondering whether I should finally go find something for dinner.
If you're looking for a psychological thriller packed with family drama, revenge, secrets, suspicious neighbors, and an ending that actually delivers, The Psychopath Next Door is well worth your time.
Just maybe eat dinner before you start reading.


















