A review by jenpaul13
The Stranger Upstairs by Lisa M. Matlin

3.0

A couple with a secret past binding them together buys a murder house to renovate but as they make their attempts the house seems to be fighting them, when they aren’t fighting themselves, in The Stranger Upstairs by Lisa M. Matlin.

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Starting over isn’t unfamiliar to Sarah Slade, but this time as the social media influencer and therapist begins renovations on an infamous murder house, Black Wood House, she’s posting updates on her lifestyle blog so there’s greater scrutiny on the façade of a life she’s built to hide her secrets, including the deterioration of her marriage. With hopes that fixing up the house to make a tidy profit may help improve things between her and her reserved husband Joe, Sarah’s stress and anxiety levels ratchet up, making it easier to attribute some strange things happening in the house to that, but as sounds, like footsteps in the attic, suddenly slamming doors, and mysteriously menacing notes appear, Sarah is convinced that someone in the tightly knit community of Beacon is trying to intimidate her to leave. When Sarah tries to get to the bottom of who could be harassing her, she uncovers the mystery of Amanda, the woman who purchased the house before her who disappeared, sending her in a spiral that she could be next, especially if the truth about her were revealed.

With a house presented as an intriguingly ominous and haunting entity, the scenes that take place within the confines of those walls have an eerie feel to them to drive readers to question just what the reality of the situation unfolding is. While there were unnerving things happening in the house to build up suspense within the narrative the pace moved slowly until events reached a sudden boiling point and began to happen in a quickfire manner; the secret binding Sarah and Joe together, while terrible, was built up to be much more dire, causing the truth of it to feel overblown, especially with Joe’s lack of presence during the story. Sarah is yet another depiction of a woman with mental illness struggling to cope while using alcohol and being presented as unreliable as a result, which is disappointing because her mimicking ability and tendency was fascinating but generally underutilized and could have helped to set her character apart from others of her ilk in such a familiar story. Though the inclusion of blog posts and new stories varied the format of the text, there was a lack of emphasis on the touted social media element of Sarah’s character and the insertion of another character’s perspective for a couple chapters, though providing a level of rationality to balance the delusions seizing Sarah, felt disjointed in their incorporation, taking away from focus on how Sarah’s mental state changed.

*I received a copy of this book from the publisher via NetGalley in exchange for an honest review.