A filmmaker himself, Shay excels at twisty plotting, characters who reveal themselves through action and biting dialogue, and scenes that build to hairpin turns, keeping readers on constant edge. The story gets wilder as it goes, especially after Lacey discovers her father was secretly wealthy—and a possible connection between his work for a tech company and reports of a “severe and transmissible atypical neuro-virus” sweeping Hong Kong and apparently pushing people into acts of self-harm. Lacey will team up with Hugo, the son of a cruel star of the Communist party, as they face a secret plot involving mind control.
Shay creates unexpected, button-pushing suspense scenes involving the loss of agency over one’s body, but Lacey’s dark adventure never is especially graphic. The novel’s pleasures come from its relentless invention, the way the conspiracy gets ever bigger, involving AI and the secret history of Hong Kong, with frequent revelations, jolts, and betrayals. The ending satisfies, though readers hooked by the of-the-moment TikTok detective hero should know Lacey isn’t posting much as the people she loves get targeted.
Takeaway: Swift thriller pitting a Tiktok detective against mind control in Hong Kong.
Comparable Titles: Olivia Blacke’s Killer Content, Chan Ho-Kei’s Second Sister.
Production grades
Cover: A
Design and typography: A
Illustrations: N/A
Editing: A
Marketing copy: A