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22nd January 2020
06:00am GMT

Around 10 years before the events of the story, Lauren's mum Christine vanished without a trace. Niall and Lauren are still struggling to come to terms with her being gone and, really, it doesn't help aha the villagers are constantly gossiping about her disappearance - and Niall's possible involvement in it.
It's a little more than halfway through the book, the storyline takes a dark and chilling turn. Sinister-seeming circles are burnt near a neighbours house, and Lauren and Diane discover an eerie ramshackle cabin the forest.
Which, in the history of books (and film - and TV shows, too), has never, ever, ever, ever contained anything good or helpful or remotely happy - so you can only imagine how well things pan out in there for Lauren and Diane.
And when Ann Marie, an older friend of Lauren's, disappears and Niall begins to suffer alcoholic-induced blackouts, it soon becomes clear to Lauren that she can no longer know who to trust.
The setting is equal parts stunning and claustrophobic, and it's hard to feel like you're not in the village yourself - or, at the very least, like you may have been there at some point before.
Packed with folklore, magic and an eerie sense of foreboding every time you turn the page, Pine will captivate readers from the very first page.
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