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Havoc

A Novel

ebook
0 of 6 copies available
Wait time: About 8 weeks
0 of 6 copies available
Wait time: About 8 weeks

A Los Angeles Times Book Prize Finalist

A New York Times' "Best Thriller of the Year"

In the vein of The Bad Seed comes a twisty, atmospheric psychological suspense about a meddlesome elderly guest at a decadent luxury hotel who believes she has left her problematic past behind, until she decides to interfere in the lives of a young mother and her eight-year-old son, and finally meets her wicked match.

The war between age and youth has never been so vicious.

Eighty-one-year-old widow Maggie Burkhardt came to the Royal Karnak to escape. But not in quite the same way as most other guests who are relaxing at this threadbare luxury hotel on the banks of the Nile. Maggie, a compulsive fixer of other people's lives, may have found herself in hot water at her last hotel in Switzerland and just might have needed to get out of there fast... But here at the Royal Karnak, under the hot Saharan sun, she has a comfortable suite, a loyal confidante in the hotel manager, Ahmed, and a handful of sympathetic friends, similar "long-termers" who understand her still-vivid grief for her late husband, Peter. Here, she is merely the sweet old lady in Room 309.

One morning, however, Maggie notices a new arrival at check-in: a mournful-looking young mother named Tess and her impish eight-year-old, Otto. Eager to help, Maggie invites them into her world. But it isn't long before Maggie realizes that in her longing to be a part of their family, she has let in an enemy much stronger than she bargained for. In scrawny, homely Otto, Maggie Burkhardt has finally met her match.

A propulsive, addictively-readable breakout from the critically acclaimed author of A Beautiful Crime and The Lost Americans, Havoc is brilliant, twisty psychological suspense that will get under your skin like the most unforgettable Hitchcock classics.

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    • Booklist

      Starred review from October 15, 2024
      Elderly widow Maggie Burkhardt traveled aimlessly until COVID-19 restrictions settled her at Luxor's Royal Karnak Palace Hotel. T here, Maggie has created a found family and decided to stay permanently. Trusted and loved, Maggie feels safe to satisfy her secret compulsion to free people of their doomed, damaging relationships (despite hinting that her projects have recently had deadly outcomes). Maggie's Karnak idyll is threatened when Otto, an unsettlingly sharp eight-year-old, catches her red-handed, planting evidence of an affair she's certain will nudge a woman to leave her self-absorbed husband. Otto shrewdly leverages the furor surrounding the wife's dramatic departure to blackmail Maggie, and her heavy-handed retaliation ignites a savage battle of wills. Everyone at the hotel is a potential weapon, and Maggie and Otto are evenly matched in manipulative prowess and stunted scruples. As Maggie loses control, she lets clues about her hidden past slip, lending a dark edge to her plans. Maggie's confidential narrative is instantly absorbing, evolving from snarky, grandmotherly observations to spiteful accusations, and cloaking the impropriety of targeting an eight-year-old foe in Maggie's obsession with protecting her newfound home. Fans of Helene Tursten's Elderly Lady (beginning with An Elderly Lady Is Up to No Good, 2018) reality-warping psychological thrillers will delight in this twisty original.

      COPYRIGHT(2024) Booklist, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Kirkus

      October 15, 2024
      Thelma meetsThe Bad Seed meetsThe White Lotus in this Covid-19-era tale of an elderly American woman's murderous obsession with a troubled young boy at an Egyptian hotel. The 81-year-old Maggie Burkhardt left her home in Wisconsin six years ago following the deaths of her husband and daughter. Moving from hotel to hotel, she spent five years in the Alps, where she perfected her unseemly skill at insinuating herself into people's lives to cause the breakup of what she deems bad marriages. "I liberate people who don't know they're stuck," says the widow, whose methods include planting false evidence of infidelities and relating false rumors. After both partners in one targeted marriage die--the wife by strangling, the husband by suicide--and suspicions point Maggie's way, she escapes to Luxor and picks up where she left off. Convincing her fellow hotel guests that she is a kindly old lady, she sets her sights on a young American woman, Tess, only to find her hands full with Tess' psychologically damaged 8-year-old, Otto. He incurs Maggie's wrath with stunts like stealing a precious ribboned lock of her husband's hair and pretending to be her late daughter on the phone. Taking heavy doses of antipsychotic drugs, she becomes determined to kill the boy. Guests who threaten to expose her turn up dead. Others are arrested for crimes they didn't commit. Returning to the setting of his gripping novelThe Lost Americans (2023), Bollen takes the art of the unreliable, self-deluded narrator to new heights. Did Maggie really have a happy marriage? Did her family really die? Is she really 81? (All the physical stuff she must do would suggest someone younger.) The ending of the novel is a bit slack, leaving plot strings untied. But it's still a wicked delight. A devious and deranged thriller.

      COPYRIGHT(2024) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Publisher's Weekly

      Starred review from September 23, 2024
      An octogenarian Wisconsin widow faces off against an eight-year-old troublemaker in this first-rate tale of psychological suspense from Bollen (The Lost Americans). At the height of the Covid lockdown, the garrulous Maggie Burkhardt basks in her self-appointed role as social director for the guests at the Royal Karnak Palace Hotel in Luxor, Egypt—that is, until the arrival of young Otto Seeber and his mother. Though the scrawny, bespectacled Otto looks innocent, Maggie soon learns there’s more to the boy than meets the eye. When Otto spies Maggie sneaking out of another guest’s room, he offers to trade his silence for her agreement to upgrade him and his mother from the hotel’s worst room to a $900-a-night luxury suite. So begins a dangerous chess match between the unlikely adversaries, each of whom is refreshingly drawn against type. As the mayhem mounts and the plot careens toward a genuinely shocking climax, Maggie’s reliability as a narrator comes into doubt. Enriching the narrative with an evocative sense of atmosphere and playful riffs on The Bad Seed and Agatha Christie, Bollen serves up a nasty treat. It’s a bracing ode to bad behavior. Agent: Bill Clegg, Clegg Agency.

    • Library Journal

      November 15, 2024

      Bollen (The Lost Americans; A Beautiful Crime) writes a cat-and-mouse psychological thriller set in a sprawling hotel located on the banks of the Nile. The cat might be 81-year-old widow Maggie Burkhardt, a meddlesome fixer. The mouse might be eight-year-old Otto, son of the mournful Tessa. Or it might be the other way around. Prepub Alert.

      Copyright 2024 Library Journal

      Copyright 2024 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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This project was made possible in part by the Institute of Museum and Library Services. Funding for additional materials was made possible by a grant from the New Hampshire Humanities and the National Endowment for the Humanities.