Jessica Goodman
Author of They Wish They Were Us
About the Author
Image credit: via Penguin Random House
Works by Jessica Goodman
Associated Works
13 Little Love Stories: An anthology inspired by Taylor Swift songs (2026) — Contributor — 9 copies, 2 reviews
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They'll Never Catch Us is a tightly written, gripping, suspenseful YA thriller which explores some important issues. It takes place in Edgewater, a small Catskills town with a star high school-cross country running team.
Stella and Ellie are two sisters on the team, with very different personalities, both highly competitive. A new girl and runner, Mila, moves to Edgewater, joins the team and becomes competition for Stella and Ellie. Ellie is immediately drawn to Mila's friendliness. Shortly show more thereafter, prickly Stella starts to open up to Mila as they have much in common. Then Mila vanishes on an early morning run. Stella is blamed as she allegedly had a violent incident with another runner the previous year. The mystery is complicated by the town's legacy of a series of unsolved murders of female runners that happened over 10 years ago.
The characters are really well developed, interesting and complicated, especially the sisters. The story, told in Stella and Ellie's points of view, moves quickly with twists, turns and an unexpected ending.
Relevant themes such as sexism, racism and addiction are addressed. The female athletes face misogyny and are treated like a stable of race horses, their purpose to bring glory to the coach and the town, yet are denigrated for being competitive and driven. It is the women who must alter their behavior in the face of violent crime. Ellie's boyfriend is a lying, gaslighting, abuser. The incompetent police department does not take the murder of the first victim, years ago, seriously because she is Black. One of the characters has the perspective of being one of the only Black people in a small town. The main characters are profoundly affected by the substance abuse of a parent. The portrayal of these important issues adds depth and substance to the motives and events of the story. They'll Never Catch Us, although categorized as YA, is a compelling read for adults as well. show less
Stella and Ellie are two sisters on the team, with very different personalities, both highly competitive. A new girl and runner, Mila, moves to Edgewater, joins the team and becomes competition for Stella and Ellie. Ellie is immediately drawn to Mila's friendliness. Shortly show more thereafter, prickly Stella starts to open up to Mila as they have much in common. Then Mila vanishes on an early morning run. Stella is blamed as she allegedly had a violent incident with another runner the previous year. The mystery is complicated by the town's legacy of a series of unsolved murders of female runners that happened over 10 years ago.
The characters are really well developed, interesting and complicated, especially the sisters. The story, told in Stella and Ellie's points of view, moves quickly with twists, turns and an unexpected ending.
Relevant themes such as sexism, racism and addiction are addressed. The female athletes face misogyny and are treated like a stable of race horses, their purpose to bring glory to the coach and the town, yet are denigrated for being competitive and driven. It is the women who must alter their behavior in the face of violent crime. Ellie's boyfriend is a lying, gaslighting, abuser. The incompetent police department does not take the murder of the first victim, years ago, seriously because she is Black. One of the characters has the perspective of being one of the only Black people in a small town. The main characters are profoundly affected by the substance abuse of a parent. The portrayal of these important issues adds depth and substance to the motives and events of the story. They'll Never Catch Us, although categorized as YA, is a compelling read for adults as well. show less
Stella and Ellie Steckler were incredibly close when they were little. They had to be: their parents had their own concerns (their mom was an alcoholic and their dad suffered from depression), so there were times when it felt like they could only rely on each other. Stella, the older sister, remembers the bad times a little more clearly than Ellie, and as they get older and their parents aim for a more normal and stable life, it's Stella who reacts by turning inside herself and becoming show more harder and more focused while Ellie is more social. They both get into cross country running, although Stella's better and has a good chance at getting a college scholarship.
Until she doesn't. An incident involving another cross country runner results in Stella losing her chance at the scholarship and gaining a reputation for being violent and angry. Ellie and Stella begin to grow apart. Stella starts to view Ellie as competition, while Ellie's still struggling to get out of Stella's shadow.
Mila Keene, a new girl at their school, is a cross country star who's a threat to both of their scholarship chances. Despite that, they both find themselves opening up to her in unexpected ways...and then suddenly Mila disappears, and people start talking. Did she just run away? Or did an angry and violent Stella kill her to remove some of the competition? Or is this a sign that the person who killed several female cross country runners ten years ago and was never caught is now back and killing again?
I bought this expecting a YA thriller with tension, murder, and lies. This turned out to be more of a YA mystery with a great deal of focus on sisterly bonds and the pressures and expectations teen girls face. Mila didn't disappear until almost halfway through the book, and since I was approaching this as a thriller, that felt like an eternity.
The second half of the book was much better than the first, both because I'd begun to realign my genre expectations and because the disappearance that the publisher's description had promised had finally happened. Also, Stella, in particular, became a much more sympathetic character, to the point that parts of the second half were downright excruciating. She was trying so hard to move forward, but she'd been labeled "violent Stella" and every move she made was automatically a mistake.
Although the full details of what happened to Mila and who killed her took me by surprise, there were aspects that were utterly predictable. This book's greatest strength wasn't its mystery, but rather the way it depicted Ellie and Stella's complicated relationship and the things they and the other cross country girls were going through. Whether it was true or not, they all viewed this (high school, cross country running) as their one big window of opportunity to leave their small town and the roles it forced upon them behind, and every one of them responded to the pressure in different ways. Stella and Ellie got the most attention, but several of the other girls got a bit fleshed out as well.
The toughest thing about this book was how much female rage it had simmering under the surface. Stella's was the most obvious - in the midst of all the ways others judged her, the only thing she could do was focus on her goal to win and get a college scholarship, but that caused its own problems. Ellie's rage was more hidden but felt almost as strong as Stella's. She'd had a secret relationship with another girl's boyfriend (not really a spoiler, it was revealed early on), and although they'd both made mistakes, somehow they always became more her problems than his. It got to the point where I wanted to finish the book so that I could stop feeling so angry on behalf of the Steckler girls. All that anger was exhausting.
Overall, I thought this was good, but I wish the first half had been tighter and that I hadn't gone into it with "thriller" expectations. There were aspects that could have been dropped or maybe given less attention. Also, maybe this was on purpose, but Stella and Ellie's POVs felt similar enough that I frequently got them confused - not what I expected since the publisher's description made them sound like polar opposites.
(Original review posted on A Library Girl's Familiar Diversions.) show less
Until she doesn't. An incident involving another cross country runner results in Stella losing her chance at the scholarship and gaining a reputation for being violent and angry. Ellie and Stella begin to grow apart. Stella starts to view Ellie as competition, while Ellie's still struggling to get out of Stella's shadow.
Mila Keene, a new girl at their school, is a cross country star who's a threat to both of their scholarship chances. Despite that, they both find themselves opening up to her in unexpected ways...and then suddenly Mila disappears, and people start talking. Did she just run away? Or did an angry and violent Stella kill her to remove some of the competition? Or is this a sign that the person who killed several female cross country runners ten years ago and was never caught is now back and killing again?
I bought this expecting a YA thriller with tension, murder, and lies. This turned out to be more of a YA mystery with a great deal of focus on sisterly bonds and the pressures and expectations teen girls face. Mila didn't disappear until almost halfway through the book, and since I was approaching this as a thriller, that felt like an eternity.
The second half of the book was much better than the first, both because I'd begun to realign my genre expectations and because the disappearance that the publisher's description had promised had finally happened. Also, Stella, in particular, became a much more sympathetic character, to the point that parts of the second half were downright excruciating. She was trying so hard to move forward, but she'd been labeled "violent Stella" and every move she made was automatically a mistake.
Although the full details of what happened to Mila and who killed her took me by surprise, there were aspects that were utterly predictable. This book's greatest strength wasn't its mystery, but rather the way it depicted Ellie and Stella's complicated relationship and the things they and the other cross country girls were going through. Whether it was true or not, they all viewed this (high school, cross country running) as their one big window of opportunity to leave their small town and the roles it forced upon them behind, and every one of them responded to the pressure in different ways. Stella and Ellie got the most attention, but several of the other girls got a bit fleshed out as well.
The toughest thing about this book was how much female rage it had simmering under the surface. Stella's was the most obvious - in the midst of all the ways others judged her, the only thing she could do was focus on her goal to win and get a college scholarship, but that caused its own problems. Ellie's rage was more hidden but felt almost as strong as Stella's. She'd had a secret relationship with another girl's boyfriend (not really a spoiler, it was revealed early on), and although they'd both made mistakes, somehow they always became more her problems than his. It got to the point where I wanted to finish the book so that I could stop feeling so angry on behalf of the Steckler girls. All that anger was exhausting.
Overall, I thought this was good, but I wish the first half had been tighter and that I hadn't gone into it with "thriller" expectations. There were aspects that could have been dropped or maybe given less attention. Also, maybe this was on purpose, but Stella and Ellie's POVs felt similar enough that I frequently got them confused - not what I expected since the publisher's description made them sound like polar opposites.
(Original review posted on A Library Girl's Familiar Diversions.) show less
I was pleasantly surprised by this! I came into it with very low expectations, expecting another hollow high school drama with annoying characters and an over-usage of slang and pop culture. However, I found myself genuinely invested both in the plot and the main character. It was well written and had a depth to it that I find is often missing with YA novels. The relationships felt real, and the themes (grief, love, intimacy, legacy) were handled very well. Plus, I love characters like show more Shaila who haunt the narrative. show less
The Counselors is set at an elite, idyllic summer camp in small town Vermont called Alpine Lake. Goldie, Ava and Imogen met at Alpine Lake for the first time when they were 8 years old. They swore to be 'sisters by choice' and their friendship has endured. Ava's father is a powerful financier. Imogen is also wealthy and wants to become an actress. Goldie is a townie but is able to go to camp because her parents are employees there. The girls are camp counselors. Each girl comes to camp with show more secrets she hasn't revealed to other two. Goldie's secret is particularly devastating, and she has had an awful year. Then Goldie's ex-boyfriend, Heller, is found dead on camp property, his death determined to be an accident. As Goldie starts to question the circumstances of his death, she realizes that Alpine Lake has its own dark secrets.
The Counselors is told through dual timelines, which really builds the tension. The novel's strengths are the atmospheric summer camp setting, so perfectly portrayed, the complex and strong friendship between the three girls, and the examination of class and privilege. The enormous wealth of the campers starkly contrasts with the residents of the struggling small town. This gripping, well-paced thriller is an entertaining and insightful summer read. show less
The Counselors is told through dual timelines, which really builds the tension. The novel's strengths are the atmospheric summer camp setting, so perfectly portrayed, the complex and strong friendship between the three girls, and the examination of class and privilege. The enormous wealth of the campers starkly contrasts with the residents of the struggling small town. This gripping, well-paced thriller is an entertaining and insightful summer read. show less
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