Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:
NATIONAL BESTSELLER * Two sensational unsolved crimes--one in the past, another in the present--are linked by one man's memory and self-deception in this chilling novel of literary suspense from National Book Award finalist Dan Chaon.
NAMED ONE OF THE BEST BOOKS OF THE YEAR BY
The Wall Street Journal * NPR * The New York Times * Los Angeles Times * The Washington Post * Kirkus Reviews * Publishers Weekly
"We are always telling a story to ourselves, about ourselves." This is one of the little mantras Dustin Tillman likes to share with his patients, and it's meant to be reassuring. But what if that story is a lie?
A psychologist in suburban Cleveland, Dustin is drifting through his forties when he hears the news: His adopted brother, Rusty, is being released from prison. Thirty years ago, Rusty received a life sentence for the massacre of Dustin's parents, aunt, and uncle. The trial came to epitomize the 1980s hysteria over Satanic cults; despite the lack of physical evidence, the jury believed the outlandish accusations Dustin and his cousin made against Rusty. Now, after DNA analysis has overturned the conviction, Dustin braces for a reckoning.
Meanwhile, one of Dustin's patients has been plying him with stories of the drowning deaths of a string of drunk college boys. At first Dustin dismisses his patient's suggestions that a serial killer is at work as paranoid thinking, but as the two embark on an amateur investigation, Dustin starts to believe that there's more to the deaths than coincidence. Soon he becomes obsessed, crossing all professional boundaries--and putting his own family in harm's way.
From one of today's most renowned practitioners of literary suspense, Ill Will is an intimate thriller about the failures of memory and the perils of self-deception. In Dan Chaon's nimble, chilling prose, the past looms over the present, turning each into a haunted place.
Praise for Ill Will
"In his haunting, strikingly original new novel, [Dan] Chaon takes formidable risks, dismantling his timeline like a film editor." -- The New York Times Book Review
"The scariest novel of the year . . . ingenious . . . Chaon's novel walks along a garrote stretched taut between Edgar Allan Poe and Alfred Hitchcock." -- The Washington Post
"In 1983, Dustin Tillman's family--his parents and his aunt and uncle--were murdered in a shocking massacre. His foster brother, Rusty, was convicted of the crime, in a trial that was steeped in the "Satanic Cult" paranoia of the 1980s. Thirty years later, Rusty's conviction is overturned, and suddenly Dustin, now a psychologist, must question whether his testimony that imprisoned his brother was accurate. When one of his patients, an ex-cop, gets him deeply involved in a series of unsolved murders, Dustin's happy suburban life starts to unravel, as his uncertainties about his past and present life begin to merge"-- Provided by publisher.
Reviews provided by Syndetics
Library Journal Review
At 15 hours to find out whodunit (you'll probably guess early), howdunit (you'll need to wait for it), whydunit (well...? no spoilers!), we're talking commitment. A full cast (why don't producers reveal who's who?), including veterans Ari Fliakos and -Edoardo Ballerini, with Scott Aiello, -Michael Crouch, and Alex McKenna, keep the pace brisk, even as the characters ruminate a bit too long on unnecessary details. Impatience aside, the premise is intriguing: Dustin Tillman, a fortysomething psychologist on suburban cruise control, is jolted by the news that older brother Rusty has been DNA--exonerated from his life sentence after 30 years in prison. Already a troubled teen when the Tillman family adopted him, Rusty was convicted of the gruesome murders of their parents, an aunt, and an uncle-and now he's getting out. Meanwhile, current reports of murder have been haunting Dustin on the job as one of his clients, a former cop, presents a hard-to-ignore theory that a serial killer is targeting college boys. Caught between past and present crimes, Dustin's life heads toward implosion. VERDICT Despite an aurally convincing cast, Chaon's (Among the Missing) latest proves to be more meandering mess than mesmerizing mystery. ["Chaon creates a world of tragedy, disease, and drug abuse right out of today's news and makes it real while keeping readers guessing on many levels": LJ 2/1/17 starred review of the Ballantine hc.]-Terry Hong, Smithsonian BookDragon, Washington, DC © Copyright 2017. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Publishers Weekly Review
For this exceptional and emotionally wrenching novel, Chaon (Await Your Reply) plants the seeds of new manias into the hard, unforgiving ground that will be familiar to his readers. In 1983, when psychologist Dustin Tillman was 13, his mother, father, aunt, and uncle were murdered. Dustin accused his adopted older brother, Rusty, a sadistic kid attracted to Satanism, of the crime, and Rusty was incarcerated. The murders shaped Dustin's life as much as they did Rusty's; his Ph.D. dissertation was on Satanic ritual abuse, and he practices hypnotherapy despite its detractors. Now in his early 40s, he's an ineffectual father of two boys and an oblivious husband to a dying wife in suburban Ohio. Having convinced himself of his vision of the past and clinging only to "memories of happiness," he's unnerved to learn that Rusty has been exonerated and released. What he doesn't know is that Rusty has reached out to Dustin's youngest, Aaron, a teenage junky sliding into Cleveland's dangerous underground, urging the boy to talk to Wave, Dustin's estranged cousin, who may know the truth of the murders. The paths of several characters converge as one of Dustin's patients convinces him to investigate a spate of drownings and Aaron's best friend Rabbit is pulled from the river, dead. With impressive skill, across multiple narratives that twine, fracture, and reset, Chaon expertly realizes his singular vision of American dread. (Mar.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.
Booklist Review
In his first novel in seven years, National Book Award finalist Chaon has created another of those twilight realms of which he is an indisputable master (see the story collection Stay Awake, 2012). The book's characters plumb the depths of deception and surpass all established measures of instability and dysfunction. They grapple so ineffectively with issues of loss, grief, displacement, or mere hormonal confusion that they simultaneously contribute to and feed off of shared delusions and imminent peril. Told in many voices through the past and into the present We are always telling a story to ourselves, about ourselves the story runs on two tracks: a family massacre for which an adopted son was falsely imprisoned at the height of the 1980s satanic-cult mania, and an ongoing string of urban legend-like drowning deaths involving drunken college boys. If the definition of eeriness is indeed strange, suspicious, and unnatural, the definers of the genre (Edgar Allan Poe, Henry James, Shirley Jackson, Peter Straub, et al.) have a worthy heir in Dan Chaon.--Murphy, Jane Copyright 2017 Booklist