The insatiable Volt sisters
Description
Named one of the Best Horror Books of 2023 by The New York Times"Weird and exhilarating and funny and sad and disturbing and scary and poignant and righteous." —Paul Tremblay, author of The Pallbearers Club"Pure nightmare fuel." —Gus Moreno, author of This Thing Between UsIt's the summer of 1989 and Beatrice and Henrietta Volt are coming of age on remote Fowler Island, their ancestral home and wild playground. Thicker than thieves, the sisters plot their futures, having no idea that their parents are separating. Or that the plan is to separate them. Ten years pass before Henrie gets a desperate call from her sister—their father has died suddenly and B.B. needs her to come back to the island for the funeral. But Henrie doesn’t want to go back. She’s barely put the island and all those rumors about missing women behind her. And isn’t it odd that she remembers nothing at all about the night she left? And why is she suddenly filled with fear about the quarry pond behind the house? Told from the perspectives of four flawed, fascinating women, The Insatiable Volt Sisters is a lush, enthralling fable about monsters real and imagined. From the unbounded imagination of Rachel Eve Moulton, the critically acclaimed author of Tinfoil Butterfly, comes another eerie, terrifying exploration of family and legacy: Will the Volt sisters inherit the horrors of their past or surpass them?
More Details
Moulton, Rachel Eve Author
Peterson, Nancy Narrator
Stephens, Chelsea Narrator
Stribling, Amanda Narrator
9798212280600
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Published Reviews
Booklist Review
After numerous accolades for her first novel Tinfoil Butterfly (2019), Moulton returns, channeling classic Shirley Jackson with a guest appearance by H. P. Lovecraft. B.B. and Henrie, the Volt Sisters, are the last in the line of the founding family of Fowler Island on Lake Erie, infamous for the mysterious disappearance of its female visitors, including B.B.'s own mother. Opening in 2000, B.B. contacts Henrie about the death of their father. Henrie agrees to return home, bringing her mother, Carrie. The story is told in two time frames, 2000 and 1989, the year Henrie and her mother escaped the island. Encountering the perspectives of four realistically flawed women, B.B., Henrie, Carrie, and the island's museum curator, Sonia, readers will be hooked by the place and its dark history. As details are slowly unveiled, this weird tale morphs from unsettling to terrifying until a monstrous explosion erupts from its core, propelling the story to its satisfying finish. A timely, haunting fable about women fighting back and uniting to defeat their demons, this is a perfect suggestion for fans of Rachel Harrison, Gwendolyn Kiste, and Lucy Snyder.
Publisher's Weekly Review
This vivid and masterful domestic horror novel from Moulton (Tinfoil Butterfly) centers on generations of women locked in loving mortal combat. First introduced are the eponymous Volt sisters, Beatrice (or "B.B.") and Henrietta ("Henrie"), who, in the 1980s, grow up together on Lake Erie's tiny, wild Fowler Island. Then their parents separate, and Henrie's mother, B.B.'s stepmother, snatches her away to the mainland to save her from the island's malevolent influence. Ten years later, Henrie is reluctantly drawn back by news of their father's death--and she soon rediscovers the island's many forgotten secrets. The Volt family has ostensibly dominated Fowler's since ancestor Seth carved out a massive stone quarry and built his eccentric mansion, Quarry Hollow--but really, the island dominates them. Myriad young Volt women have died in the quarry, devoured by a shape-shifting devil that lives under the island and exerts his influence over the Volts, compelling the men in the family to clean up his mess. As Henrie and B.B. struggle against this fate--and each other--they seek guidance from Henrie's mother, Carrie; island historian Ms. Sonia; and the many ghosts trapped within Quarry Hollow's walls. Moulton expertly balances hope and dread as the tension builds to a fever pitch. Readers will be hooked. (Apr.)
Library Journal Review
Family trauma, secrets, and a potentially haunted house coalesce in the latest from Moulton (after the Shirley Jackson Award--shortlisted Tinfoil Butterfly). Stepsisters Henrie and B.B. haven't been together on their Lake Erie island home in 10 years. Henrie was forced to leave the island with her mother after her and B.B.'s parents divorced. She left her memories of that place behind, while B.B. stayed on the island with father. Now Henrie has returned for her stepfather's funeral after he suddenly died. It becomes clear that there might have been a reason for the sisters to be separated for that long, however, and the island seems to have missed them. The sisters prove that some homes are not places of comfort or places one longs to return to. This is a powerful supernatural horror novel about strong women and the pain that shapes them. VERDICT Twists and turns keep readers riveted through the entire novel, and the ending will stick with them for days. Fans of Shirley Jackson's The Haunting of Hill House will appreciate it.--Victoria Kiszka
Kirkus Book Review
Fowler Island seems like a quaint getaway off the coast of Ohio in Lake Erie, but something sinister lurks beneath its surface--literally. Henrietta Volt, 24, hasn't been back to her childhood home in a decade when Beatrice Bethany, her older half sister, calls in the year 2000 with the news that their father, James, has died and she must return to the island for the funeral. Henrie loved growing up as an island kid alongside B.B., but her memories are fuzzy, especially the circumstances under which she left at age 14 with her mother, Carrie, while B.B. stayed behind with their father. When Henrie and Carrie return for the funeral, their memories, and a whole lot more, take shape, revealing secrets that go back generations. This book has all the elements you could want in a thriller--missing women, a mysterious mansion, monsters, ghosts, and, at its center, a pair of sisters as unsettling as the Blackwoods of Shirley Jackson's We Have Always Lived in the Castle. Moulton juggles these pieces well as she moves the story between 2000 and 1989, when the sisters were teenagers. She delivers many delicious moments of suspense and sheer terror. The scope is so ambitious, though, that the story can feel convoluted in some places, while it's oddly thin in others. The island, including the family house and the quarry where some pivotal action takes place, is described in minute detail many times over, while certain subplots remain unexplored. Some aspects of the Fowler and Volt family mythology are revisited to the point of redundancy, while others go unaddressed. Moulton builds a fascinating world but never quite establishes its rules. Still, each point-of-view character who narrates the story--Henrie, B.B., Carrie, and Sonia, the island archivist and a family friend of sorts--pulls off her piece to tell an engrossing tale. A wonderfully weird novel about powerful women, inheritance, and desire. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Booklist Reviews
After numerous accolades for her first novel Tinfoil Butterfly (2019), Moulton returns, channeling classic Shirley Jackson with a guest appearance by H. P. Lovecraft. B.B. and Henrie, the Volt Sisters, are the last in the line of the founding family of Fowler Island on Lake Erie, infamous for the mysterious disappearance of its female visitors, including B.B.'s own mother. Opening in 2000, B.B. contacts Henrie about the death of their father. Henrie agrees to return home, bringing her mother, Carrie. The story is told in two time frames, 2000 and 1989, the year Henrie and her mother escaped the island. Encountering the perspectives of four realistically flawed women, B.B., Henrie, Carrie, and the island's museum curator, Sonia, readers will be hooked by the place and its dark history. As details are slowly unveiled, this weird tale morphs from unsettling to terrifying until a monstrous explosion erupts from its core, propelling the story to its satisfying finish. A timely, haunting fable about women fighting back and uniting to defeat their demons, this is a perfect suggestion for fans of Rachel Harrison, Gwendolyn Kiste, and Lucy Snyder. Copyright 2023 Booklist Reviews.
Library Journal Reviews
Family trauma, secrets, and a potentially haunted house coalesce in the latest from Moulton (after the Shirley Jackson Award—shortlisted Tinfoil Butterfly). Stepsisters Henrie and B.B. haven't been together on their Lake Erie island home in 10 years. Henrie was forced to leave the island with her mother after her and B.B.'s parents divorced. She left her memories of that place behind, while B.B. stayed on the island with father. Now Henrie has returned for her stepfather's funeral after he suddenly died. It becomes clear that there might have been a reason for the sisters to be separated for that long, however, and the island seems to have missed them. The sisters prove that some homes are not places of comfort or places one longs to return to. This is a powerful supernatural horror novel about strong women and the pain that shapes them. VERDICT Twists and turns keep readers riveted through the entire novel, and the ending will stick with them for days. Fans of Shirley Jackson's The Haunting of Hill House will appreciate it.—Victoria Kiszka
Copyright 2023 Library Journal.Publishers Weekly Reviews
This vivid and masterful domestic horror novel from Moulton (Tinfoil Butterfly) centers on generations of women locked in loving mortal combat. First introduced are the eponymous Volt sisters, Beatrice (or "B.B.") and Henrietta ("Henrie"), who, in the 1980s, grow up together on Lake Erie's tiny, wild Fowler Island. Then their parents separate, and Henrie's mother, B.B.'s stepmother, snatches her away to the mainland to save her from the island's malevolent influence. Ten years later, Henrie is reluctantly drawn back by news of their father's death—and she soon rediscovers the island's many forgotten secrets. The Volt family has ostensibly dominated Fowler's since ancestor Seth carved out a massive stone quarry and built his eccentric mansion, Quarry Hollow—but really, the island dominates them. Myriad young Volt women have died in the quarry, devoured by a shape-shifting devil that lives under the island and exerts his influence over the Volts, compelling the men in the family to clean up his mess. As Henrie and B.B. struggle against this fate—and each other—they seek guidance from Henrie's mother, Carrie; island historian Ms. Sonia; and the many ghosts trapped within Quarry Hollow's walls. Moulton expertly balances hope and dread as the tension builds to a fever pitch. Readers will be hooked. (Apr.)
Copyright 2023 Publishers Weekly.