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Andrea T
TOP 500 REVIEWER
4.0 out of 5 stars Atmospheric and gripping
Reviewed in Australia on 15 January 2020
Format: Kindle Edition
What is always surprising about cults is that they consistently manage to attract seemingly intelligent people who leave their ordered lives to join bizarre communities run by petty tyrants with delusions of grandeur. What is sadly not surprising is that at the centre of cults there are often innocents, the children.

There’s a few plot devices or themes that can pop up in crime fiction which are not for everyone. Cults might be one of those for you, as they usually are for me. In the Clearing is based on a real-life cult, an Australian new age group known as ‘The Family’. I knew very little going into this read about the group, other than that the kids of The Family all had bleached blonde hair ala village-of-the-damned, and that it all began somewhere in the late 1960’s. It’s suggested that you conduct your Wiki diving perhaps after reading Pomare’s book, as too much prior knowledge going in could detract from your enjoyment of this read.

In the Clearing features two first person narratives. Amy is a teenage member of a reclusive community led by Adrienne, a commanding and charismatic figure referred to as ‘the Queen’ and considered by her devoted followers to be the living reincarnation of Jesus Christ. Amy has taken on the group’s mistrust of all those who live outside of the clearing and that vigilance must always be upheld. Brutal punishments are doled out to any member who breaks their rules, and those rules are in place to keep their ways hidden from those who might seek to tear it all down.

Freya lives with her young son by the river, working as a yoga teacher and managing her property in the heat of summer. Some in the town know that Freya has two sons, and that Freya hasn’t seen her eldest in many years. When a young local girl goes missing, Freya’s suspicions are sent into overdrive. Freya is quite certain that an old ghost from her past has come to visit.

The misdirections employed In the Clearing are subtly delivered and it is upon reflection that you will realize how clever they were. Freya’s chapters features a countdown to some cataclysmic event, and it is evident that Amy is heading for the point of no return, illustrated via the inclusion of excerpts from her journal. We hold fear for both of them.

Pomare has written a powerful and accomplished second novel that takes a firm hold of your attention from the first chapter. In the Clearing masterfully cleaves a path to the truth with the linkage between the book’s two narrators shocking to realize when it all becomes clear. The pace of the novel is purposeful and deliberate, information slowly eked out to the reader who becomes increasingly invested in the two who seem utterly alone whilst under serious threat.
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Mandy White
TOP 50 REVIEWER
5.0 out of 5 stars You need to read this book
Reviewed in Australia on 1 January 2020
Format: Paperback
Did you love Call me Evie? Yes... then you are going to LOVE In the Clearing! In my opinion In the Clearing is better than Call Me Evie! It is that good!

This was a book that I was desperate to get my hands on, so a huge thank you to Hachette Books Australia for sending an advanced copy my way. I could not wait to get started on it and then I was completely hooked, and needed to see how it was going to end. I was gobsmacked when it was revealed. Absolutely brilliant. When I finished this book I was thinking about it for days, it just got into my head and I kept throwing things around.

I really don't know what I can say about this book without spoiling the story. The blurb really does say enough to get you excited. We hear the story from the points of view 2 women -

Freya - who is super security conscious and paranoid after what happened with her ex and her son
Amy - who lives in the Clearing and knows no life other than this.

The first chapter will have you hooked and you will not want to put it down. You will become immersed in both of their lives and want to know what is going to happen next. and you will also think that you know what is going to happen next and you will be wrong!

Released in Australia on December 31st, 2019 - start 2020 off with a bang and a great book.
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Kimmy C
5.0 out of 5 stars Compelling Take On Cults and Those In And Out Of Them.
Reviewed in Australia on 13 January 2020
Format: Kindle Edition
When Christian ‘The Wife And The Widow’ White has endorsed ‘After reading page one, you won’t be able to stop’, it’s certainly an inducement for me to buy this book. And it certainly puts a very Australian slant to the insiders and outsiders of cults, evoking memories of The Family who were notorious decades ago, but adding in the heart pounding child abduction and double crossing, and moving across events in the main character’s life. I certainly enjoyed reading this - not to the extent that ‘I wasn’t able to stop’ but obviously life gets in the way.
I’d certainly buy J.P Pomare’s first book Call Me Evie on the strength of this one.
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