The Cottage on Ghost Lane by Christy Barritt
Series: The Beach House Mystery Series
Publisher: River Heights on July 1, 2021
REVIEW BY STACI TROILO
The Cottage on Ghost Lane by Christy Barritt is the first in a four-book Christian romantic suspense series (The Beach House Mystery Series). I believe these works all stand on their own, and if the initial installment is any indication, they will be fast and easy reads.
The book opens with Cole Dalton, an EOD specialist (retired) whose wife died in an automobile accident. Given the danger of his work, he expected to be the one to pass first, but instead he lost the love of his life. A year later, he’s still grieving. He returns to the beach house he and his wife had been restoring to process his loss and say goodbye.
He planned on finishing the renovation. He didn’t plan on fighting for his life.
Walking in on a violent intruder should have been the most perilous moment of his trip, but the danger keeps increasing. Someone wants something in his house, though he can’t imagine what. And they’ll do anything to get it.
In addition to his unknown enemy, Cole meets a few other people on the beach. He even finds himself on his first date since losing Caroline. The author balances high-stakes action with introspective moments to create a comfortable progression throughout the book.
The faith element is clearly expressed in times of both physical danger and overwhelming emotions, but it never feels heavy-handed.
God and her faith in Him were the only things that had gotten her through these past months. When she felt like she couldn’t take any more, she’d gotten on her knees and simply prayed to Him. She had to rely on His strength, knowing it was greater than her own.
Christy Barritt, The Cottage on Ghost Lane
I usually enjoy this author’s work very much, and I found the concept of this story quite compelling. Unfortunately, I have to subtract points for both character and pacing.Â
With respect to characters, they felt flat. The leads had true emotional traumas, but they weren’t fleshed out. We only got the surface pain and not the deep-rooted issues, so the protagonists never really came to life for me. And the secondary characters were easy to figure out. I knew their roles immediately and wasn’t surprised by anything they did. Also, there were no red herrings. I prefer having to guess who the enemy is, and I felt cheated of that chance.Â
With respect to pacing, everything just unfolded too fast. I suspect if we’d had more character development and more suspects and clues to investigate, that wouldn’t have been an issue. There was a lot of gold in this story, but the author chose not to mine it. She left the best parts unexplored, and the story suffered for it.
The plot itself was interesting, and the author did a nice job of setting a mood, particularly during raging storms. But that wasn’t enough for me. These characters never got a proper arc because we never dug deeply into their traumas.
If you like plot-forward Christian thrillers, you’ll enjoy this. I personally prefer character-driven stories (thriller or not), and so I have to take away 1.5 fishes on this one and give it 3.5.

I read The Cottage on Ghost Lane through Kindle Unlimited.

I like red herrings too, even though I always fall for them (always!). Great review, Staci. Maybe The Cottage on Ghost Lane would make a good summer vacation read when someone is mostly distracted and doesn’t need anything too involved.
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That’s an astute assessment, Priscilla. It’s an easy-to-consume story that doesn’t require much concentration, perfect for people just looking to pass the time with a quick read.
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Excellent review, Staci, and thanks for highlighting the issues with pacing and characters. Unlike authors who succumbed to the siren’s call of artificial intelligence, Christy Barritt developed and maintained a disciplined writing process. Given the 200+ books and millions sold, I’m impressed by her prolific writing while maintaining quality. I’ve enjoyed reading many of her novels, but some are better than others.
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Not every book will appeal to every reader, and not every author will always write their best-to-date work. I enjoy this author very much and will continue to read her work. (And yes, Grant, she gets, and deserves, bonus points for producing human-made content. Maybe I should have taken that into consideration, but I only read authors I trust to produce their own content, so I didn’t think about adding that into my rubric. Good call to point that out.)
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Barritt has that ability to put the mystery into mysteries and cozy into cozies. I’ve been a fan of her writing for years.
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Can’t ask for a better endorsement than that!
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Thank you for this honest review, Staci.
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Thank you. I try to point out pros and cons as unbiasedly as possible. I’m glad those efforts came through in my review.
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Of course. I think i prefer honest, than the glazed over review. We can come to our own conclusions, but it’s good to hear all opinions. Even if it were of my writing.
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I feel that way too. ESPECIALLY about my own writing. (Even if it hurts.)
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It does sound like an interesting plot. I always wonder how people survive the loss of a soulmate.
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I know too many people who are trying to do just that. (You’re right, Jacqui. It is an interesting premise.)
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Great review, Staci, too bad it didn’t dive more into the characters. That is always my favorite part of a story. Great cover though.
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It’s my favorite part too, which is why I tried to make it clear this is purely my opinion and preference. I know there are people who love plot-forward work, and they’ll love this. (I enjoyed it even without the deep dive I’d have liked.) Thanks, Denise.
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I’m definitely a character-driven-story reader vs. plot-driven. It sounds like there was a lot of unexplored potential in this novel. It’s the shame the author didn’t dig deeper. Hopefully, the remaining books in the series will pick up what this one lacked.
A very insightful review, Staci!
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I definitely would have dug in deeper (if I wrote this), but that wasn’t the story she wanted to tell, I guess. It was still good. Just wasn’t what I’d hoped for. I haven’t read the rest of this series yet. (To be honest, I forgot all about it.) But I’m interested to see how the next one goes. And if I’m willing to do that, you know it’s okay even for those of us who prefer character-driven fiction.
Thanks, Mae.
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Hi Staci, I also prefer character driven books so this isn’t for me. Thanks for your detailed review.
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Not every book can appeal to every reader. Hope all is well, Robbie.
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As well as possible. How are you, Staci ? đŸŒ¸
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About the same, thanks. đŸ¥°
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