April Henry
Walker 2013
Kayla sets of to deliver a pizza, a
normal part of a normal job. She never
returns, leaving behind a few scattered pizza boxes on the forest floor and no
answers. Drew, who took the fateful
order, remembers nothing bar an unmemorable voice that asked for an unappetizing pizza and an altogether
different girl. Gabie, having swapped shifts with Kayla,
swiftly realises that she has narrowly escaped Kayla’s fate. Because Gabie is the other girl, the one so
eagerly requested, the girl whom Kayla replaced. Whoever took Kayla really wanted Gabie and
no-one has any idea of where either Kayla or her abductor are. As the local community slips into a morass of guilt and
suspicion, Gabie and
Drew struggle with uncertainty and fear. Where is Kayla? Who took
her? And does he still want someone
else?
Both Gabie and Drew are characters
who seem to keep themselves to themselves.
Despite being from opposite sides of the tracks, they are fairly similar. Gabie, academically smart, with loving if
largely absent parents blends into the background of life effortlessly. While pleasant, she seems
to have no real friends although she clearly enjoys working with the ebullient
Kayla. She is quick to admit – and not
really bothered by – her plainness and could easily have been a fairly dull
character were it not for the fact that she hasn't gone unnoticed by everyone. Her guilty reaction to Kayla’s disappearance
is extreme and verges, in fact, on real instability. Her utter conviction that Kayla is still
alive is borne of guilt, yes, but also of fear and both this and her sudden
attachment to Drew are completely understandable.
Drew himself is a sympathetic
character. Struggling with a meth-head,
kleptomaniac mother at Pete’s Pizza because he has to,
trying to keep his head above water for a future that has already given up on
him. Again, he has few friends but is
well liked at work and the guilt he feels on being the last person to see Kayla
before she disappeared, indeed on being the one who he perceives sent her to
her probable death, is palpable throughout.
He clearly liked Kayla a lot but he’s never really paid much attention to Gabie. Now, thrown together with a girl who seems to
be teetering on the brink of sanity, he comes into his own in a way he probably hasn't before. He panders to Gabie, but
never too much, taking time to try and understand her while also preventing her
from taking her crazed theories too far.
Their growing friendship is extremely well observed as it moves from the
need for mutual absolution through shared belief to a final
solid and believable bond.
The
Night She Disappeared is a short but incredibly well constructed
novel. In addition to the first person
narratives of Drew and Gabie, there are a further two prominent voices – both of
which are eerily effective. There is
also a third person, omniscient narrator through which we view snapshots of the community, most notably effective in a short section that and enters the lonely world of a police diver, searching for
one family’s hell in the abyss of a dark river.
In addition to this, the book contains fragments of evidence, scattered throughout
its pages. Telephone and interview transcripts; a
search warrant; the edict of a fortune cookie; a poignant To Do list; a bloody message
scrawled on the label of a water bottle.
This overcrowded format could have led to a confusing mess, but so carefully are the
narratives and ephemera placed that they add a depth and a sense of frightening reality to April
Henry’s already sinister story.
As the story progresses, Henry
fills it with fascinating characters – some of whom appear only briefly but
will stay with readers for much longer than their short appearances. From the psychic who may or may not be
exploiting the situation to the tweaker who attracts suspicion to the police
officer who dismisses Gabie as a possible victim because she’s just too plain,
they are all exceptionally well realised. The Night She Disappeared is
accomplished although the ending, while
satisfying, lacks the ambiguity which haunts the real-life case that
inspired the book’s premise. This is a
minor quibble, though. Ultimately, The Night She Disappeared works well on
many levels - thriller, horror, mystery, police procedural and YA contemporary
all rolled into one compelling package. This is a book that is difficult to put down and one that will have you
pondering the many societal issues it touches on long after you turn the last
page.
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