60 pages • 2 hours read
Summary
Background
Chapter Summaries & Analyses
Character Analysis
Themes
Symbols & Motifs
Literary Devices
Important Quotes
Essay Topics
Further Reading & Resources
Tools
Content Warning: The novel contains graphic descriptions of suicide and references to animal and child abuse, and centers on the mental-health condition of dissociative identity disorder (DID).
Told in the first person, this first chapter describes the arrival of the family (narrator Sadie, her husband, Will, their two sons, Otto and Tate, and the family dogs) to the house in Maine they have just inherited from Alice, Will’s recently deceased sister. Along with the house, which is located on a small island, comes Imogen, Alice’s 16-year-old daughter. Imogen is a dark and surly teenager. The house is described as gray and full of moldy and dusty furniture. Sadie and Otto are not pleased by the move, unlike Tate and Will, who seem ready to embrace their new life and create their new family.
The opening chapter, like all of Sadie’s entries, is told from the first-person perspective using the “I” voice. This voice makes the narrator closer and more immediate to a reader, which is useful in suspense fiction, as the reader experiences events alongside the narrator. This is a subjective way to present a story, which is compounded by Sadie’s unreliability as a narrator due to her yet-to-be-revealed mental-health condition.
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By Mary Kubica