The Invited: A Novel

The Invited: A Novel

by Jennifer McMahon

Narrated by Amanda Carlin, Justine Eyre

Unabridged — 11 hours, 50 minutes

The Invited: A Novel

The Invited: A Novel

by Jennifer McMahon

Narrated by Amanda Carlin, Justine Eyre

Unabridged — 11 hours, 50 minutes

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Overview

A chilling ghost story with a twist: The New York Times best-selling author of The Winter People returns to the woods of Vermont to tell the story of a husband and wife who don't simply move into a haunted house — they build one....

In a quest for a simpler life, Helen and Nate have abandoned the comforts of suburbia to take up residence on 44 acres of rural land where they will begin the ultimate, aspirational do-it-yourself project: building the house of their dreams.

When they discover that this beautiful property has a dark and violent past, Helen, a former history teacher, becomes consumed by the local legend of Hattie Breckenridge, a woman who lived and died there a century ago. With her passion for artifacts, Helen finds special materials to incorporate into the house — a beam from an old schoolroom, bricks from a mill, a mantel from a farmhouse - objects that draw her deeper into the story of Hattie and her descendants, three generations of Breckenridge women, each of whom died suspiciously.

As the building project progresses, the house will become a place of menace and unfinished business: a new home, now haunted, that beckons its owners and their neighbors toward unimaginable danger.


Editorial Reviews

MAY 2019 - AudioFile

Narrator Amanda Carlin is perfect in her very minor role in this frustrating audiobook, expressive and with the subtlest hint of a Vermont accent. Justine Eyre, who performs the lion’s share of the story, has a lovely voice and is quite good at dialogue, but she has performance tics that muddy the author’s intention and weary the listener. Still, this story of the afterlife of Hattie, a twentieth-century “witch” whose misunderstood gifts got her hanged by angry townspeople, is entertaining and artfully full of misdirection. The nice young couple from away who have moved onto the “haunted” land and are building their dream house amid dire warnings and apparent supernatural sightings may either end up drowned in the bog, or unscramble the mystery. Place your bets. B.G. © AudioFile 2019, Portland, Maine

From the Publisher

Entertaining. . . powerful. . . supplies a plethora of frights that emerge from believable characters trying to navigate normal lives. McMahon again proves that the modern ghost story is more than things that go bump in the night. It hinges on reality, slowly building to a terror that seems real and sometimes personal, as it does in THE INVITED.”
Minneapolis Star Tribune

“McMahon finds ingenuity in the likes of Shirley Jackson to craft a story. The chills come from equal helpings of both unearthly and tangible disquiet throughout.”
Fangoria
 
“McMahon blends her historical tale of rural Vermont with some crafty ghost stories and makes it impossible for the reader to turn away.” —Suspense Magazine
 
“Ghostly. . . engaging. . . unnerving.”
—Syfy.com
 
“Jennifer McMahon’s latest premise is utterly chilling: Imagine you don’t stumble upon a haunted house, you build one. The Invited deserves a special spot in the canon of great ghost stories, and will remind McMahon’s readers why she is such a worthy literary descendant of Shirley Jackson.”
—Chris Bohjalian, bestselling author of The Flight Attendant
 
A dream home becomes one of nightmares for a husband and wife attempting to start a new life in the woods of Vermont. Board by board, stone by stone, tragic events of the past creep toward the light in this delicious slow burn of a haunted tale.
—J.D. Barker, bestselling author of The Fourth Monkey and Dracul
 
“THE INVITED ha(s) one hell of a hook. . . I’ve been devouring it. McMahon’s prose is clean and unfussy, with a steady attention to tension. . . I don’t get scared by horror novels much anymore, but a scene of something otherworldly unfolding in the night actually gave me goosebumps.”
—Alex McLevy, The A.V. Club
 
 “[A] powerful supernatural thriller…. Whether one believes in ghosts, McMahon’s consummately crafted chiller is guaranteed to haunt.”
Publishers Weekly (starred review)
 
“[The] blend of ghost story and modern mystery is flawlessly compelling and evocative. A masterful twist on the haunted-house story.”
Booklist (starred review)
 
“The latest from McMahon is like a nesting doll - a thriller inside a murder mystery inside a ghost story - and will chill readers with every sideways glimpse of a passing shadow.”
Library Journal
 
“On one level, The Invited is a straightforward mystery, but ghosts and spirits still haunt its edges in a truly unsettling way. . . . THE INVITED will appeal to mystery fans and devotees of paranormal fiction alike.” –The Book Reporter
 
“Rich enough in shivers to make a good fireside read for McMahon's many fans.”
Seven Days Vermont

MAY 2019 - AudioFile

Narrator Amanda Carlin is perfect in her very minor role in this frustrating audiobook, expressive and with the subtlest hint of a Vermont accent. Justine Eyre, who performs the lion’s share of the story, has a lovely voice and is quite good at dialogue, but she has performance tics that muddy the author’s intention and weary the listener. Still, this story of the afterlife of Hattie, a twentieth-century “witch” whose misunderstood gifts got her hanged by angry townspeople, is entertaining and artfully full of misdirection. The nice young couple from away who have moved onto the “haunted” land and are building their dream house amid dire warnings and apparent supernatural sightings may either end up drowned in the bog, or unscramble the mystery. Place your bets. B.G. © AudioFile 2019, Portland, Maine

Product Details

BN ID: 2940169240443
Publisher: Penguin Random House
Publication date: 04/30/2019
Edition description: Unabridged

Read an Excerpt

9780385541381|excerpt

McMahon / THE INVITED

 
Hattie Breckenridge
MAY 19, 1924

It had started when Hattie was a little girl.
 
She’d had a cloth-bodied doll with a porcelain head called Miss Fentwig. Miss Fentwig told her things—things that Hattie had no way of knowing, things that Hattie didn’t really want to hear. She felt it deep down inside her in the way that she’d felt things all her life.
 
Her gift.
 
Her curse.
 
One day, Miss Fentwig told her that Hattie’s father would be killed, struck by lightning, and that there was nothing Hattie could do. Hattie tried to warn her daddy and her mother. She told them just what Miss Fentwig had said. “Nonsense, child,” they said, and sent her to bed without supper for saying such terrible things.
 
Two weeks later, her daddy was dead. Struck by lightning while he was putting his horse in the barn.
 
Everyone started looking at Hattie funny after that. They took Miss Fentwig away from her, but Hattie, she kept hearing voices. The trees talked to her. Rocks and rivers and little shiny green beetles spoke to her. They told her what was to come.
 
You have a gift, the voices told her.
 
But Hattie, she didn’t see it that way. Not at first. Not until she learned to control it.
 
Now, today, the voices cried out a warning.
 
First, it was the whisper of the reeds and cattails that grew down at the west end of the bog—a sound others would hear only as dry stalks rubbing together in the wind, but to her they formed a chorus of voices, pleading and desperate: They’re coming for you, run!
 
It wasn’t just the plants who spoke. The crows cawed out an urgent, hoarse warning. The frogs at the edge of the bog bellowed at her: Hurry, hurry, hurry.
 
Off in the distance, dogs barked, howled: a pack of dogs, moving closer, coming for her.
 
And then there were footsteps, a single runner coming down the path. Hattie was in front of their house, an ax in her hands, splitting wood for the fire. Hattie loved splitting wood: to feel the force of the blows, hear the crack as the ax head hit the wood, splitting it right at the heart. Now she raised the ax defensively, waiting.
 
“Jane?” she called out when she saw her daughter come bursting out of the woods, hair and eyes wild. Her blue flowered dress was torn. Hattie had sewn the dress herself, as she’d made all their clothes, on her mother’s old treadle sewing machine with fabric ordered from the Sears, Roebuck catalog. Sometimes Hattie splurged and bought them dresses from the catalog, but they were never as comfortable or durable as the ones she sewed.
 
Hattie lowered the ax.
 
“Where have you been, girl?” she asked her daughter.
 
It was a school day, but Hattie had forbidden her daughter from going to school. And last she knew, Jane was gathering kindling in the woods.
 
Jane opened her mouth to speak, to say, but could not seem to make the words come.
 
Instead, she burst into tears.
 
Hattie set down her ax, went to her, wrapped her arms around Jane’s trembling body.
 
Then she smelled the smoke on Jane’s dress, in her tangled hair.
 
Even the smoke spoke to her, spun an evil tale.
 
“Jane? What’s happened?”
 
Jane reached into the pocket of her dress, pulled out a box of matches.
 
“I’ve done something wicked,” she said.
 
Hattie pushed her away, held tight to her arms, searched her face. Hattie had spent her life interpreting messages and signs, divining the future. But her own flesh and blood, her daughter—her mind was closed to Hattie. Always had been.
 
“Tell me,” Hattie said, not wanting to know.
 
“Mama,” Jane said, crying. “I’m sorry.”
 
Hattie closed her eyes. The dogs were coming closer. Dogs and men who were shouting, crashing through the woods. It had always been funny to Hattie how men who’d spent their whole lives mov­ing through these woods, hunting in them, could move so clumsily, without grace, without any trace of respect for the living things they trod upon.
 
“What will we do?” Jane looked pale and young, much younger than her twelve years. Fear does that to a person: shrinks them down, makes them small and weak. Hattie had learned, over the years, to put her own fears in a box at the back of her mind, to stand tall and brave, to be resilient to whatever enemy presented itself.
 
“You? You’ll go hide in the root cellar back where the old house used to be.”
 
“But there are spiders down there, Mama! Rats, too!”
 
“Spiders and rats are the least of our concerns. They’ll bring you no harm.”
 
Unlike the men who are coming now, Hattie thought. The men who are close. Getting closer still. If she listened, she could hear their voices, their shouts.
 
“Cut through the woods to the old place. Climb down into the cellar and bar the door. Open it for no one.”
 
“But, Mama—”
 
“Go now. Run! I’ll come for you. I’ll lead them away, then I’ll come back. I’ll be back for you, Jane Breckenridge, I swear. Don’t you open that cellar door for anyone but me. And, Jane?”
 
“Yes, Mama?”
 
“Don’t you be afraid.”
 
As if it could be that easy. As if you could banish fear just like that. As if words could have such power.
 
By the time Jane ran down the path, the dogs were coming from the east, from the road that led into the center of town. Old hound dogs, trained to tree bears and coons, but now it was her scent they were after.
 
Don’t be afraid, Hattie told herself now. She concentrated on push­ing the fear to the back of her mind. She picked up her ax and stood tall.
 
“Witch!” the men who ran after the dogs cried. “Get the witch!”
 
“Murderer!” some cried.
 
“The devil’s bride,” others said.
 
Ax clenched in her hands, Hattie started off across the bog, know­ing the safest path. There were parts that dropped down, went deep; places where springs bubbled up, bringing icy-cold water from deep underground. Healing water. Water that knew things; water that could change you if you’d let it.
 
The peat was spongy beneath her feet, but she moved quickly, surely, leaping like a yearling deer.
 
“There she is!” a man shouted from up ahead of her. And this was not good. She hadn’t expected them to come from that direction. In fact, they were coming from all directions. And there were so many more of them than she’d expected. She froze, panicked, as she looked at the circle forming around her, searching for an opening, a way out.
 
She was surrounded by men from the sawmill, men who stood around the potbelly stove at the general store, men who worked for the railroad, men who farmed. And there were women, too. This she should have expected, should have seen coming, but somehow hadn’t.
 
When a child’s life is lost, it’s the mother who bears the most grief, the most fury. The women, Hattie knew, might be more dangerous than the men.

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