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Middle of the Night
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Middle of the Night | The End
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…I just can’t decide if I loved the ending for giving me the feels, or if the story was wrapped up way too nicely for my taste, LOL.


I enjoyed the different POVs with every flashback. I once again find myself wishing Sager had just leaned into the paranormal instead of dangling it out there. I enjoyed the book and the ending but I feel like it was an easy wrap up.
Side note: not crazy about the audiobook being voiced by one person. He did a great job considering he was voicing everyone in the neighborhood but it caused a lot of confusion early on.

This book had to be the most heart wrenching piece of work Riley Sager has ever written. The overall tone of this story is so different than any of his other novels (usually campy fast paced thrillers).
The ending was alittle lack luster (for me) - wrapped up to neatly. Why couldn’t Billy have disappeared and no one knows how he got in the water? Think that would have been a better ending honestly.

I did suspect the killer BUT this book had me suspecting everyone and I really loved that! I really was tense in a few seasons and really enjoyed the atmosphere of this one.
Now, I am a sucker for grief horror and this really had a lot of underlying themes of guilt. I also felt like there was this focus on the everyday “monsters” and secrets of suburban neighborhoods. How there is so much danger all around you everyday that it could have been anyone at any time.
I will CERTAINLY read from Riley Sager again!

I was expecting the reveal about Claudia to be that she was pregnant and that's why she was desperate for Ethan to change his mind. So I was surprised yet not surprised about her death reveal. The part with him saying goodbye and listening to his first voicemail to her really got me.
I didn't predict the ending. The only thing I had right was once it was revealed that Russ sliced the tent open I figured he wasn't involved in Billy's death. After all, at the time, Russ was really small and the same age as Billy, no way he would've been able to kill him and toss his body over the falls, even if he had managed to get him all the way there, through the woods, and through the wall hole. For a second, after it was revealed about what Ethan said in the tent argument, I thought Billy going over the falls might have actually turned out to be self-inflicted. That he in a moment of hurt and obsession with ghosts might have taken what Ethan said and ran with it. That Sager was really going to double down on the mental health aspect. I'm glad it didn't end that way though, I'm happy with the ending we got.
4 stars! I'll definitely be reading more Riley Sager.

While I like the general turn of events, Riley Sager kind of did the thing where all the red herrings are more interesting than the truth (reminds me of The Last Time I Lied).


From the first page I kind of felt that this is RS’s most mature book. I’ve watched a few reviews where people found it distinctly boring but I felt like Sager really hit his stride. Because, outside of the “institute” a lot of this just felt really real. The sort of stagnancy of summer as a kid when you don’t know anyone or are stuck with the one kid that’s near by, in the suburbs, where you have to make your own fun. Gossipy neighbours. Etc.
NGL, if he had gone with the institute, the ghosts, the whole paranormal bag and really leaned in I probably could have given this a five star rating because I just love the stupid and over the top thrillers. I’m one of those people who loved House Across the Lake. But as it stands I think this is a high 4? I haven’t fully fleshed out my rating yet.



This was my first Riley Sager, I'm rating this a 3.8. I have more of his stuff in my tbr and will be reading Home before Dark next :)


My feelings exactly!

I kept thinking the brother was definitely involved, but I was surprised by Russ's and Ashley's involvement. I also suspected something weird was going on with Claudia because she never answered his calls/texts.
I've consistently liked Sager's second, fourth, sixth, and now eighth release more than the odd numbered releases, so now I'm a little nervous for his next book lol.

I 'll keep on reading Sager's books because so far I haven't disliked any of his books.


1. The last time I lied
2. Lock every door
3. The only one left
4. Middle of the night
5. Survive the night
6. Final girls
7. Home before dark
8. The house across the lake
It was shockingly sad and my mom and I kept revising our theories as I read more and learned more about the night Billy disappeared. I was right that his death was an accident, but I thought the entire time that Ethan and Billy got in a fight by the waterfall and Billy fell in during the fight and then Ethan blocked the whole thing out because it was so traumatic.
I did have an inkling though that Andy was messing with him and it wasn’t a ghost once they revealed that both neighbors had a set of keys and I guess I assumed that Andy would know what quotes and sayings Billy liked to sa.

I predicted Andy was involved somehow, at least when it came to the balls. I didn’t expect Claudia passing away and that being the reason for not returning Ethan’s phone calls. The thought that all that Ethan was seeing about Billy was because he couldn’t accept or let go of Claudia, this was all the process of his grieving. I was surprised at the end of the killer reveal, I believe it was nicely revealed, but a little bit of a let down. Very “Lifetime Movie” type ending. I would read another Sager book

Totally agree. I had such a nice time with this one, and really felt for the characters. I haven't read a Riley Sager in so long, or a mystery/thriller (other than the occasional Agatha Christie) and it was kind of nice being back in his twisty writing. I can see why people might not like it but it. totally worked for me!




I liked this book a lot more than Sager's previous release, The Only One Left. It's tonally completely different, more of a slow burn mystery than a Gothic dramatic thriller. It's also more realistic in it's ending/reveal. There were about 3 twists or surprise reveals that were satisfying although I did have a hunch about one of them from the very beginning.
I do get the complaints of this book being repetitive, there's a lot description of events and then recounts of the same event through flashbacks, but I didn't mind them much. Overall, it was a solid thriller (not that complicated or smart, but entertaining), just be warned, it is slower paced than is expected from a typical Sager book.




I really loved the premise and it being a hit and run (quite mundane in the context) in the end only added to the fun for me. I just felt like it was too long and the middle section was honestly quite boring. Overally, this one landed somewhere between the other two I have read, Survive the night and The only one left.

I also really liked how this book sort of had people dealing with grief. It was so much more than regular thriller/mystery book.


message 36:
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Sarah (is clearing her shelves)
(last edited Oct 04, 2024 04:36AM)
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rated it 4 stars

Could you predict the ending?
Not the killer until only a couple of paragraphs before she was revealed. I never even thought about Billy's brother being around, I was stuck on Ethan's experiences being supernatural in some way. It also never occurred to me that the tent slasher wasn't the same person as Billy's killer and when Russ admitted to slashing the tent I thought he had killed Billy because he was jealous of his and Ethan's relationship. It was a slight disappointment that Billy's death turned out to be totally mundane (not even a murder), but I liked his little cameo in the waterfall.
Were there reveals you enjoyed?
I liked being proved right regarding Claudia's fate.
Did you recognize any themes the author wanted to touch on?
Guilt, I suppose? I'm not good at theme analysis (I hated it when we got to that part of the English lesson in high school).
Are you left with any questions?
Would it really be that easy for a convicted killer to decide who her child is adopted by? I would have thought the courts would have been much more involved and would have taken the decision out of Ashley's hands.
Will you read more from this author?
Absolutely. I already have five other books by him on my hold list at the library.
Feel free to spoil your thoughts on the entire book here.
Could you predict the ending?
Were there reveals you enjoyed?
Did you recognize any themes the author wanted to touch on?
Are you left with any questions?
Will you read more from this author?