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Greenleaf Book Group
Service Provider
Slow Slide into the Truth
Psychotherapist Beth Linn is trying to stay focused on her work in the town where she grew up. But she’s becoming increasingly triangulated between clients in a situation she senses could become deadly and the discovery of long-held secrets about her own past. Kim St. Clair’s thrilling debut novel takes us deep into the experiences of being both therapist and client. We enter the uncomfortable spaces of the profession—the isolation of confidentiality and the weight of possessing information that cannot be shared. We witness the vulnerability of being a client and how difficult it can be to trust a therapist. Ultimately, this gifted author allows us to see how beautiful—and terrifying—it is to expose our pain to a professional we hope possesses the skills and compassion to realize what we need. Once drawn into this skillfully interwoven story, we can’t help but emerge ready to listen to the tiny voices inside our heads that lead us out of fear and into freedom.
Reviews
St. Clair’s debut novel centers around the life of psychotherapist Beth Linn and her increasingly fraught work in a small, troubled town. As Beth goes about her job, having hard conversations about people’s lives, she is jolted to discover that therapy clients seem possibly implicated in a school bomb threat—“If you believe he’s dangerous,” she is told of one, “then you’re responsible to report it.” Even as she strives to understand who did what, what they’re capable of in the future, and her own complex ethical obligations (the situation, she tells her mother, involves “confidentiality that I can’t break without some form of proof”), the tense situation continues to escalate, with threats targeting religious minorities at the high school, all as Beth faces personal problems of her own, involving a DNA test and a secret that could shock her family.

Beth’s office sits at the heart of the narrative: the reader is offered a glimpse of clients who walk in and out of therapy sessions, venting their issues and listening to Beth’s guidance, a lot of them identified by quirky nicknames like “dancer” and “queen.” St. Clair’s experience as a psychotherapist shines through, as the novel oscillates between psychological drama and detective story, as Beth gets wrapped up more deeply in the explosive situation at the school. The narrative picks up pace with each passing chapter, punctuated with twists, turns and truly surprising revelations.

The many therapy scenes, some from other perspectives, set the novel apart, and readers fascinated by the rules, tensions, and promises of such encounters will relish these. Some twists strain credulity, and a climactic confrontation feels somewhat rushed. But fleet, clear writing, an authoritative depiction of therapy, and St. Clair’s firm grasp on the tangled threads keep the pace strong and the mysteries intriguing, leaving readers with a chance to breathe only once it’s all settled.

Takeaway: Intimate psychological thriller of a therapist and the possibility of deadly clients.

Comparable Titles: Alex Michaelides’s The Silent Patient, A.F. Brady’s The Blind.

Production grades
Cover: A
Design and typography: A
Illustrations: N/A
Editing: A
Marketing copy: A

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