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The Church of Dead Girls by Stephen Dobyns
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The Church of Dead Girls (original 1997; edition 2001)

by Stephen Dobyns

MembersReviewsPopularityAverage ratingMentions
9552721,927 (3.54)54
With the first disappearance, the townspeople begin to mistrust outsiders. When the second girl goes missing, neighbors and childhood friends start to eye each other warily. And with the third disappearance, the sleepy little town awakens to a full-blown nightmare. The Church of Dead Girls displays Stephen Dobyns' remarkable gifts for exploring human nature, probing the ruinous effects of suspicion. As panic mounts and citizens take the law into their own hands, no one is immune, and old rumors, old angers, and old hungers come to the surface to reveal the secret history of a seemingly genteel town and the dark impulses of its inhabitants.… (more)
Member:dara85
Title:The Church of Dead Girls
Authors:Stephen Dobyns
Info:St. Martin's Paperbacks (2001), Mass Market Paperback
Collections:Your library, Fiction, Read
Rating:****
Tags:Fiction, murder, serial killer, New York, attic

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The Church of Dead Girls by Stephen Dobyns (1997)

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English (25)  Dutch (1)  All languages (26)
Showing 1-5 of 25 (next | show all)
Wow. That was a wild ride from start to finish. Intense, complex and unique, I thoroughly devoured The Church of Dead Girls. I often read on my walk to work in the morning but today I sat down at my desk and just had to finish the last few pages, I absolutely could not tear my eyes away from the page.

Ostensibly, The Church of Dead Girls is about the disappearance of three girls in a small New York town above the Finger Lakes. Told from the outsider perspective of a high school science teacher, the lives and secrets of his fellow citizens are revealed slowly, their layers peeled away as the tension between friends and neighbours ratchets up. The abduction of the girls is both horrific and a catalyst, the townfolk growing increasingly mad with frustration and suspicion, and fear. Not only fear of their daughter being taken next, but of their secret desires, their illicit actions being exposed and revealed to the cruel eye of the town's populace, the only judge that matters.

As I was reading I was often reminded of Gillian Flynn's Sharp Objects, to which The Church of Dead Girls seems to be a spiritual precursor. There's a creeping, unsettling feeling that only grows as you advance in the story. Like Sharp Objects the disappearance and probable murders of the missing girls, barely in their teenage years, is only part of a larger whole. The narrator relates decades worth of information, gleaned from years of personal interactions or heard secondhand from his friends, piecing together the story from what he's been told into a rich, meaty narrative.

The real story that lurks behind the abduction of the three teenage girls is the unknowable nature of the other. Even those closest to us have their secrets, the thoughts they keep to themselves, a persona they show the world that reflects only a portion of their true self. The mercurial nature of a community influenced by gossip and speculation, suspicion and fear, is as fascinating as it is frustrating. The 'other' is always targeted, the African college professor and his Marxist reading group, gay men, anyone who stands out from the 'norm' suffering from hysterical scapegoating.

Overall, The Church of Dead Girls is slow, but taut, deftly portraying the way a small community operates, the way lives intersect and affect each other. The way the town reacts to the missing girls as scarring and long-lasting as the abductions themselves, mob mentality showing the unintended dark sides of even the innocent. ( )
  xaverie | Apr 3, 2023 |
Utterly engrossing psychological thriller with murders [one committed before our eyes] and the disappearance of three teenage girls. Massive hunts go on for each of them in case they may have been abducted and are still alive. But, in each case their clothes, laundered and neatly folded, and severed left hands are returned to the townspeople. We see the unpleasant details in the everyday life of this small upstate New York town, the fictional Aurelius, which add to the creepy atmosphere. Study of how suspicion tears a once close4-knit town apart ( )
  janerawoof | Jun 10, 2021 |
Definitely not the usual thriller with serial killer that one would expect. Forget the sensationalism of gruesome crime scene description...this is more of a psychological study of a small town and what happens when fear turns each one against the "different ones". A community that breaks down and shows how mankind is not so different from the animals it likes to think are inferior.

( )
  MissYowlYY | Jun 12, 2020 |
Truly excellent psychological thriller that is also the tale of a small town and the insidiousness of suspicion. While others found the backstory of the town inhabitants too slow, I actually loved it -- the relationships were drawn so carefully and how people connect with and relate to each other does impact the plot. Well-written saga of a town. Insightful and true small-town politics and resistance to change. Good mystery, too. ( )
  sparemethecensor | Feb 4, 2017 |
Aurelius is a small community with people you'll recognize; heck, you see 'em every day. They're good folk--salt of the earth. Until the first little girl disappears. Then the smiling mask of normality begins to slip and the darkness underneath is revealed. You're led further and further down a winding path by a narrator who may or may not be trustworthy. ( )
1 vote Mrs_McGreevy | Nov 17, 2016 |
Showing 1-5 of 25 (next | show all)
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Information from the Dutch Common Knowledge. Edit to localize it to your language.
'Heel eng, heel rijk, heel overtuigend' - Stephen King
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For Toby and Catherine Wolff
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Afterward everyone said it began with the disappearance of the first girl, but it began earlier than that.
This is how they looked: three dead girls propped up in three straight chairs. (from the Prologue)
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(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)
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With the first disappearance, the townspeople begin to mistrust outsiders. When the second girl goes missing, neighbors and childhood friends start to eye each other warily. And with the third disappearance, the sleepy little town awakens to a full-blown nightmare. The Church of Dead Girls displays Stephen Dobyns' remarkable gifts for exploring human nature, probing the ruinous effects of suspicion. As panic mounts and citizens take the law into their own hands, no one is immune, and old rumors, old angers, and old hungers come to the surface to reveal the secret history of a seemingly genteel town and the dark impulses of its inhabitants.

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