These Silent Woods
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Touching
Heartwarming
Meaningful

These Silent Woods A Novel

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Reviews

Photo of Jillian Roberts
Jillian Roberts@jillianroberts
4 stars
Mar 28, 2024

Captivating. The end had me all choked up.

+2
Photo of Priscilla Stanfield
Priscilla Stanfield@priscillas01
3.5 stars
Mar 1, 2024

I had to think on this one before reviewing it. So I went into this book blind and had absolutely no idea what was happening for like half the book. But once I did understand what the story was about I was intrigued to see how it would go. Personally, I would say this isn’t a thriller. It is more fiction for me that had some suspenseful parts but never really gave thriller vibes for me. It was a strong book, written really well, but wasn’t sure what the plot line was trying to accomplish. Which could be a me thing and I just missed it. Why I’m still thinking through it. I also don’t want to spoil anything too this is just one that requires a lot of thinking to see what I feel about it.

Photo of Sonia Grgas
Sonia Grgas@sg911911
3 stars
Feb 23, 2024

Good story, but I felt very manipulated. It was one of those books that made me want to yell “take your blinders off already” at the main character. I wanted to feel more sympathy for him but just couldn’t.

Photo of lian ‪♡
lian ‪♡@liandbooks
5 stars
Jan 31, 2024

I don't usually write reviews, but this book had me in tears. It was so beautifully written and will stay with me forever. A must-read!

Photo of Keely Calagos
Keely Calagos@keelymorgan
5 stars
Jan 18, 2024

This is not a thriller, nor a traditional mystery but reading this book felt like waiting for a jump scare in a movie, you don’t know what you’re waiting for and you know it’s coming but it still catches you off guard. Or watching a video of a kid attaching a string from their loose baby tooth to the door handle, you feel mildly ill but can’t look away. This is a slow burn, ~280 page, beautifully crafted book about grief, the toll war takes on your mind/body/spirit, unconditional love, and survival. I had so many ‘ahhh this is it’ moments that ended up to be nothing. And then just when I let my guard down, BAM! The book swaps between timelines, slowly but surely giving you more insight into Coopers past and in turn their inevitable future. When I wasn’t reading, I was thinking about Cooper and Finch…I ADOREE Finch - clever and wise beyond her years, I was invested in her character and loved her little eight-year-old defiance and poetry rambelings. I went into this book pretty blind as to what it was about so I was not expecting to cry, but I’ll admit my eyes were a bit watery *ahhh the heartache*. 5/5 stars from me ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ Follow for more: https://www.instagram.com/p/Cdgojemr5...

Photo of Hannah Colbert
Hannah Colbert@hcolbert
5 stars
Jan 11, 2024

This is an incredibly well-written book with complex themes and characters. It explores the meaning of doing anything for family (whether blood or otherwise), no matter the cost. You may question your morals and what you would do for those you care about most. At the same time, it will make you think about different ways of life and whether we truly need all the "stuff" around us to be happy. It's easy to connect to the characters and become invested in where they will end up. I haven't had a book move me to tears in a very long time and this one did just that.

+3
Photo of Geoffrey Froggatt
Geoffrey Froggatt@geofroggatt
3 stars
Nov 29, 2023

I loved the premise of this book. With no connection to the outside world, Cooper and his daughter Finch have lived in isolation in a remote cabin deep in the northern Appalachian woods. And that's exactly the way Cooper wants it, because he's got a lot to hide. The only people who know they exist are a mysterious local hermit named Scotland, and Cooper's old friend, Jake, who visits each winter to bring them food and supplies. But this year, Jake doesn't show up, setting off an irreversible chain of events that reveals just how precarious their situation really is. Suddenly, the boundaries of their safe haven have blurred, and when a stranger wanders into their woods, Finch’s growing obsession with her could put them all in danger. After a shocking disappearance threatens to upend the only life Finch has ever known, Cooper is forced to decide whether to keep hiding, or finally face the sins of his past. This book had an immediate atmosphere that intrigued me. Immediately we are introduced to Cooper in the woods and it is implied he has a dark past that he’s running from and he is anticipating danger and trouble at every turn. Scotland’s introduction was eerie and uneasy, and this feeling of ominous dread is amplified by Cooper’s foreboding dream immediately after. I usually dislike depictions of children in most books, but I loved Finch’s character. She’s an interesting eight-year-old given her situation and upbringing. I liked that she was stunted in some ways but very intelligent in other ways. It made sense because of her isolation and the books that she was surrounded with. I felt so bad for Finch for not having a normal childhood and perception of the world. I’m sure the author named Finch after a bird intentionally to symbolize how caged she is at the cabin deep in the woods. The strength of this story comes from the relationship between Cooper and Finch and their dynamic as father and daughter. I grew to love them and their struggle from the first few chapters. There wasn’t a lot of action and the story wasn’t as twisty as many others in this genre, but that didn’t hinder the storytelling for me. This story was much more simpler than it could have been, but I was completely immersed and engaged during the entirety of the story because of the suspense. I would recommend this story for fans of quiet suspenseful thrillers.

Photo of Elizabeth Wood
Elizabeth Wood@ejwood41
4 stars
Aug 21, 2023

A solid 4 ⭐️ book. Loved that it was written from the father’s POV in first person. That was a unique touch. A sweet story about grace, forgiveness, and love. I really liked this book, but there was something missing for me to give it 5 stars - still haven’t been able to pinpoint it.

Photo of Melyssa Tromberg
Melyssa Tromberg @melyssat
4 stars
Feb 6, 2023

Rounded to 4.5!

Photo of shellybn
shellybn@pillywiggin
4 stars
Jan 15, 2023

I am completely conflicted about this book.

I was absolutely wrong about the reason why Cooper fled into the woods with Finch. I expected it to be because Cooper was a hard boiled detective who crossed the wrong mobsters, or he was a regular person who inadvertently witnessed a major horrific crime and had to flee. The reason was actually mundane, and based on Cooper's own stupidity.

The plot was interesting in the beginning, but as more and more of Cooper's story was told and I came to learn the reason why he was in the woods with Finch, he lost most of my sympathy. From about the halfway point to 75% of the way through, I was rating this book 2 stars in my head. Things changed near the end.

I still question Cooper's morality. He let Scotland take the fall for the "murders" of Cooper and Finch. They got to live happily ever after, while poor Scotland did life for two murders he did not commit. Then, Cooper decided to let Finch reunite with her grandparents. Had the statute of limitations on his assault and kidnapping charges run out? Finch was still not an adult. Her grandparents still had legal custody. How did Cooper avoid prison? The grandparents just "forgiving" Cooper for keeping them from their granddaughter for 16 years makes no sense, especially the way they were characterized throughout the book. Did poor Scotland get out of prison when Cooper and Finch rejoined the world, or had he already died? I really have no idea why I am giving this book 4 stars, other than because I love the idea of grace, and the message that grace is a gift, not something you earn.

PS The first time Cooper met Scotland, the author said Scotland was carrying an automatic AK-47. You cannot legally buy automatic weapons in the US, so I don't know if the writer meant that Scotland had an illegal weapon, or if the author just does not understand the difference. Referring to semi-automatic weapons as automatic is one of my pet peeves.

This review contains a spoiler
Photo of sophia n
sophia n@nyx
2 stars
Sep 16, 2022

wow idk what happened but i feel like i read a diff book than everyone else reviewing this because i did not love it. i didn't hate it either, but it was very mid, which at first after finishing i thought, well, still 3 stars ... but i can't really think of anything i liked about it actually. so. 2 stars. i feel kinda bad like clearly i missed something that everyone else seemed to get, but idk. i'm just going to say it, this was boring. i didn't really care all that much beyond just cursory interest for any of these characters. and i wouldn't call this a thriller or even a mystery. maybe a loose mystery, but any mystery elements are revealed pretty quickly, i kept waiting for more ... and there was none. if anything, this is literary fiction that uses a few mystery tropes, and i think if i'd known that going into it, my reading experience might have been very different. but expecting thrilling and mysterious elements made me also LOOK for it. and there was zero payoff. the ending made me annoyed lmao. also the setting didn't do much for me, i've read a lot spookier and better isolation-in-the-woods stories that were actually tension-filled at this point that this one was just like. okay, and? again just was so boring for me and i genuinely don't know if it was just my issue with mismatched expectations or if it was the book itself.

Photo of Jasmine
Jasmine@jasmeaniethebookish
5 stars
Sep 16, 2022

I initially requested this book because of all the high reviews, and that was probably one of the more intelligent things I’ve done this year. The desire to never put These Silent Woods down is weird because this story progresses somewhat slowly, but that doesn’t equate to a loss of interest like most other books would. The character building is phenomenal, and that allows for an insanely perfect ending. Just know that you’re probably going to need tissues for the last little bit of this book. This is a book that will tear down your belief in humanity and then build it back up stronger than it ever was before. I know I tend to be a little liberal with my stars (I’m always just going to be legitimately stoked to have the access/privilege to read), but this is one of those stories that will stick with you after. Thanks so very much to NetGalley, Minotaur Books/St. Martin’s Publishing, and Kimi Cunningham Grant for this ARC in exchange for an honest review!

Photo of Cheri McElroy
Cheri McElroy@cherimac
5 stars
Sep 5, 2022

⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ This book gutted me. Coop, Finch, and Scotland, living in the woods, grieving and growing, and learning about grace, will always have my heart.

Photo of Bonita
Bonita@pupsandlattes
1 star
Aug 25, 2022

BOOOORING. Literally nothing happened.

Photo of Akansha
Akansha@readreviewcoffee
1 star
Feb 26, 2022

We have our first disappointment of the year. I was so pissed off at this book that after finishing it I cleaned my room because I just needed something. This book is basically about a man who kidnaps his daughter and hides with her in the wood for 8years taking away her childhood and gaslights her into believing that he did it out of love because he was just not ready to accept that he needed help and he should take it and become the father a daughter deserves and legally fight for her custody and as if that was not enough in the end he let's an innocent man take the fall for him and move on with his life unbothered. In between all this he also meets a woman who instead of putting some sense into him says she understand what she did and also marries him in the end. And the daughter after growing up says I would have done the same. Also I went into this book thinking it's a thriller. The only thrill happens after 75% of the book with a girl who goes missing but I still don't understand why will the author introduce the element only to do nothing with the twist?

Photo of lexie
lexie@lexiewh
4 stars
Jan 18, 2022

I would have given this book 5 stars if it was defined as a contemporary fiction because I don’t believe it was a thriller. The whole story was very slow but the ending did make me cry which is why it gives me 4 stars.

+2
Photo of Alexandria Ferley
Alexandria Ferley@agferley
5 stars
Mar 18, 2025
Photo of Erin Goss
Erin Goss@erinmg22
4 stars
Jul 28, 2024
+2
Photo of trent swartout
trent swartout@trent
5 stars
Feb 16, 2024
+3
Photo of Ashley Lock
Ashley Lock@ashley919
4.5 stars
Feb 10, 2024
Photo of erin alise
erin alise @thehollowvalley
4.5 stars
Sep 12, 2023
+4
Photo of JM
JM@julianamarinho
2.5 stars
Jan 30, 2023
Photo of Anna Bush
Anna Bush@annabandana222
4 stars
Dec 9, 2022
Photo of Lizeth Esmeralda
Lizeth Esmeralda@lee_set
5 stars
Dec 6, 2022