
Title:- Twenty Seven Minutes
Author:- Ashley Tate
Date published:- 30th January 2024
No. of pages:- 377 pages
Setting:- West Wilmer
Genre;- Thriller
Rating:-
Plot:- 2/5
Writing:- 3/5
Overall rating:- 2.5/5

“The rare gift that delivers it all: elevated prose, characters with depth, unpredictable twists, and a pitch-perfect mood.”—Ashley Audrain, New York Times bestselling author of The Push
Phoebe Dean was the most popular girl alive and dead.
For the last ten years, the small, claustrophobic town of West Wilmer has been struggling to understand one thing: Why did it take young Grant Dean twenty-seven minutes to call for help on the fateful night of the car accident that took the life of his beloved sister, Phoebe?
Someone knows what really happened the night Phoebe died. Someone who is ready to tell the truth.
With Phoebe’s memorial in just three days, grief, delusion, ambition, and regret tornado together with biting gossip in a town full of people obsessed with a long-gone tragedy with four people at its heart—the caretaker, the secret girlfriend, the missing bad boy, and a former football star. Just kids back then, are forever tied together the fateful rainy night Phoebe died.
Perfect for fans of Jane Harper and Celeste Ng, Tate’s literary suspense Twenty-Seven Minutes is a gripping debut about what happens when grief becomes unbearable and dark secrets are unearthed in a hometown that is all too giddy to eat it up.

This book was actually a slow burn thriller
Phoebe Dean was one of the popular girls in the town and she was found dead. Within twenty-seven minutes, she could have been still alive yet she died on the spot.
Now nearly a decade later, the town in holding a memorial in Phoebe Dean. There are so many questions arising, why did her brother Grant took twenty seven minutes to call for help? There is someone in the town, who knows what really happened to Phoebe Dean on the night of the accident.
To me, this was a slow burn thriller. Not much twists and turns, and not only that, it was outright a little boring to me in my opinion. The story is told in multiple POVs–Grant, Becky, and June. It was slightly a bit difficult to distinguish between past and present but other than that, I found the book less appealing. The twist at the end was OK but overall, in the end, to me, the book was OK in my opinion. Would have been better if unnecessary parts were eliminated and made the story more intriguing and interesting. Overall this book worth 2.5 stars.
Many thanks to Netgalley and the publisher for the ARC. The review is based on my honest opinion only.

Ashley is a Canadian author; Twenty-Seven Minutes is her debut novel.
