After reading—and loving—Catch Her When She Falls, I was beyond excited to dive into Allison Buccola’s second novel, The Ascent. Exploring themes such as identity, marriage, motherhood, and trauma, the underlying topic of cults had me running to request an advanced readers copy. And let me tell you, I wasn’t let down by this sizzling tale in the slightest. You see, thanks to a slow burn plot that caught fire towards the end, I was quickly drawn into this unreliable narrator’s fracturing world. Suspenseful and twisty, I swore I knew where it was headed until a “WTF?!” twist took it in a whole other brilliant direction that I never saw coming.
Despite a plot that oozed with foreboding and a gasp-inducing twist that had my jaw on the floor, the characters were the special sauce in this psychological thriller. Well-developed and fully fleshed out, Lee’s past and present came together to outline a woman who felt utterly real. Was she a survivor or a victim? And how much had her past traumas damaged her mind? Both of these questions combined to make me question her every thought and emotion. Added to the other main characters who were equally suspicious in my eyes, this book took mind-f***ery to a whole other level—not only for Lee, but for the reader as well.
The only piece to this utter slam dunk that missed the mark for me just the littlest bit was the abrupt shift from slow burn to mildly unhinged. You see, when the climax arrived on the scene, things took a dark, twisted turn that somewhat lowered the power of the book. Just the same, I was game for it all as Lee took charge and made her character arc into a full circle smash hit.
All said and done, Buccola crafted a tale that felt decidedly different from her debut, but was just as much of a surefire win. With two intricately interwoven timelines and a cast that had me giving side-eye glances to one and all, I ripped through the pages in just over twenty-four hours. After all, I couldn’t get enough of the paranoia and fear that flowed from the pages. It was the last stunning chapter, though, that made this book sing. Wrapping up the original plot, the nice, pretty little bow left me with a Cheshire-like smile on my face. So if you like a cult premise that comes complete with plenty of head games, look no further because you’ve found it right here. Rating of 4.5 stars.
SYNOPSIS:
For decades, the whereabouts of The Fifteen has been an unsolved mystery. All the members of this reclusive commune outside Philadelphia vanished twenty years ago, except for one: a twelve-year-old girl found wandering alone on the side of the road.
In the years since that morning, Lee Burton has tried to put the pain of her past behind her, building a new identity for herself with a doting husband and seven-month-old daughter, Lucy. But motherhood is proving a bigger challenge than she anticipated. She doesn’t want to let Lucy out of her sight even for a moment. She can’t return to work. She’s not sleeping, and she has started spiraling into paranoia.
Then a stranger shows up on her doorstep, offering answers to all of Lee’s questions about her past—if Lee could only trust that this woman is who she says she is. Can Lee keep her safe, stable life? Or will new revelations about “the cult that went missing” shatter everything?
Thank you to Allison Buccola and Random House for my complimentary copy. All opinions are my own.
PUB DATE: May 20, 2025
Content warning: cult, anxiety, abandonment, cancer, gaslighting, mention of: infidelity