On a seemingly ordinary day, seventeen-year-old Lia Haddock hears news that will change her life forever: three hundred men, women, and children living at a research facility in Limetown, Tennessee, have disappeared without a trace. Among the missing is Emile Haddock, Lia's uncle.
What happened to the people of Limetown? It's all anyone can talk about. Except Lia's parents, who refuse to discuss what might have happened there. They refuse, even, to discuss anything to do with Emile.
As a student journalist, Lia begins an investigation that will take her far from her home, discovering clues about Emile's past that lead to a shocking secret—one with unimaginable implications not only for the people of Limetown, but for Lia and her family. The only problem is...she's not the only one looking for answers.
Zack Akers and Skip Bronkie are first-rate storytellers, in every medium. Critics called their podcast Limetown "creepy and otherworldly" (The New York Times) and "endlessly fun" (Vox), and "readers will have a hard time putting this story down, even as it pulls them deeper into the rabbit hole that is Limetown" (Publishers Weekly). Working with Cote Smith, a PEN/Robert W. Bingham Prize Finalist, they've crafted an exhilarating mystery that asks big questions about what we owe to our families and what we owe to ourselves, about loss, discovery, and growth. Threaded throughout is Emile's story—told in these pages for the first time ever.
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Creators
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Publisher
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Release date
November 13, 2018 -
Formats
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Kindle Book
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OverDrive Read
- ISBN: 9781501155666
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EPUB ebook
- ISBN: 9781501155666
- File size: 4508 KB
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Languages
- English
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Reviews
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Library Journal
June 15, 2018
A No. 1 podcast on iTunes, Limetown chronicles the disappearance of 300 men, women, and children who had been living at a research facility in Limetown, TN. Smith, a PEN/Robert W. Bingham Prize finalist for Hurt People, joins Limetown creators Zack Akers and Skip Bronkie to tell this prequel.
Copyright 2018 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.
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Publisher's Weekly
September 17, 2018
Since the Limetown podcast debuted in 2015, its fans have been waiting patiently to find out what happened to the 300 residents of a secret town who all disappeared without a trace. This capable prequel doesn’t quite answer that question, but it does give some insight into the podcast’s main character, Lia Haddock, and her connection to the mysterious events at Limetown. The story follows Lia and her uncle, Emilie, a resident of Limetown and Lia’s impetus for her quest for answers, through different times until their paths converge, revealing that Lia isn’t just looking to solve a mystery—she may be a key to it. Readers will have a hard time putting this story down, even as it pulls them deeper into the rabbit hole that is Limetown. The book is appropriate for listeners and nonlisteners alike, and its publication is timed to the Halloween launch of the podcast’s second season, so new fans will have hope that their questions might soon get some answers. Agent: Eve Attermann, William Morris Endeavor. -
Kirkus
September 15, 2018
Future public radio reporter Lia Haddock, 17, delves into the past to try to explain the bizarre disappearance of over 300 people from a Tennessee research center--possibly including her rarely talked about uncle Emile. Though this book is a prequel to the podcast of the same name, it can be read independently.Lia is not new to strange occurrences. Her mother, a biology professor, has been disappearing for weeks at a time--absences her passive father explains unconvincingly. "She's at a conference," he says. Encouraged by her journalism teacher to follow her intuition, Lia begins skipping classes to pursue the murky truth--which involves mysterious isolated deaths and dark forces with which her mother may be connected. Flash back to young Emile, brother of Lia's father, whose odd, brainy ways have made him an outcast at school. Emile obsesses over his own missing mother. Identified as a psychic by the head of an underground neuroscience research facility, he is forced into an unsettling experiment involving paranormal phenomena. Increasingly, the line between consciousness and reality is blurred. An uneasy mix of Serial (the true-crime podcast with which Limetown has frequently been compared), The Leftovers (with which it shares an Australian setting), and Stranger Things, the book is less creepy than the podcast, which translates into less compelling. And with descriptions such as "self-admitted moody teenager," it's not the most polished piece of fiction. But for fans of the podcast, it should be reasonably entertaining--at the very least a breezy lead-in to the second season.Riding the trend of podcasts being turned into print books, this material loses something in the translation. But its family themes come across strongly and at time affectingly.COPYRIGHT(2018) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
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