Call Me Star Girl by Louise Beech

Call Me Star Girl

by Louise Beech

A taut, emotive, devastating dark and all-consuming psychological thriller, reminiscent of Play Misty for Me … from the critically acclaimed author of Maria in the Moon and The Lion Tamer Who Lost…

***WINNER of Best magazine’s BIG Book of the Year 2019***
***LONGLISTED for Guardian‘s NOT THE BOOKER PRIZE***

'A complex and layered tale that charmed me as a much as it traumatised me. An atmospheric, haunting and beautifully written page turner!’ C L Taylor

‘Noirish psychological thriller with fascinating, disturbing characters. Compelling, twisty, and seriously addictive. EXCELLENT’ Will Dean

'As twisty and deadly as barbed wire, this book will leave you breathless’ Erin Kelly

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Stirring up secrets can be deadly … especially if they’re yours…

Pregnant Victoria Valbon was brutally murdered in an alley three weeks ago – and her killer hasn’t been caught.

Tonight is Stella McKeever’s final radio show. The theme is secrets. You tell her yours, and she’ll share some of hers.

Stella might tell you about Tom, a boyfriend who likes to play games, about the mother who abandoned her, now back after fourteen years. She might tell you about the perfume bottle with the star-shaped stopper, or about her father …

What Stella really wants to know is more about the mysterious man calling the station … who says he knows who killed Victoria, and has proof.

Tonight is the night for secrets, and Stella wants to know everything…

With echoes of the Play Misty for Me, Call Me Star Girl is a taut, emotive and all-consuming psychological thriller that plays on our deepest fears, providing a stark reminder that stirring up dark secrets from the past can be deadly…

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‘It's a slow burn at first until it twists and turns at a head-staggering rate to a devastating climax. Original, moody and totally gripping’ Claire Allan

‘Louise Beech blasts into the world of thriller writing with this moody and tense tale. With secrets, lies and plenty of twisty turns, it’s story is dark and it’s setting eerie and evocative. Definitely one where you might look over your shoulder more than once while reading!’ Fionnuala Kearney

‘An original story and beautifully written, so atmospheric … Dark, mesmerising and utterly devastating' SJI Holliday

‘Beech has used her unique flair and constructed a crime fiction story that will have you frantically turning the pages until you get to the end’ Michael Wood

‘It’s EXTRAORDINARY – tense, twisted and utterly compelling, written with such raw beauty and unflinching honesty’ Miranda Dickinson

’A thriller with heart, passion and twists that will surprise even the most astute readers’ John Marrs

‘With Call Me Star Girl, Louise proves that she can blow us all away with her writing powers – in whatever genre she chooses’ Jack Jordan

‘A smart, complex and beautifully written psychological thriller, with a raw intensity at it’s heart. Twisty, addictive and completely compelling, this powerful story will keep you hooked and leave you haunted’ Best Magazine

‘Call Me Star Girl is a unique psychological thriller which is packed with tension and suspense … A dark and atmospheric read which sends shivers down your spine’ Irish Independent

‘Part psychological thriller, part literary noir and part tragic family drama, its multiple strands slowly merge to reveal a captivating truth’ Heat

‘MUST READ’ Daily Express

‘Psychologically unsettling and with a sting in the tail, it's another cracker published by Orenda Books’ Russel McLean

Reviewed by zooloo1983 on

5 of 5 stars

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How do you even comprehend in writing a review for a book like this? I know when I read The Lion Tamer Who Lost I took straight to my blog and brain dumped, it was not coherent just a huge mess of teary words. This time I have come back to my blog to find some words to write this review, I am not in a mess of tears but I got choked up in the end and I was shocked and moved by the ending because quite frankly I could not see how this was going to end and I really did not want it to end!

With this book, I listened to it and I read it, I had a day in the office to myself and started the book and practically finished it in that day. The narrator was awesome and I felt she had captured Stella and Elizabeth both so perfectly. She got them and it made the listening that much more magical and harrowing. Plus I could imagine the narrator, Katy Sobey, being on the radio, her voice is pure magic. I will definitely be listening to more books by her!

The secrets we uncovered on Stella’s last show, well some were of the normal variety and well some discoveries, especially in the Stella and Tom chapters were…spicer and at times quite dark.

Despite the darkness of this book and the secrets, the main force driving this book, for me, was love. The intense kind that could quite literally drive you to murder, the kind where you are so wrapped up in each other that it is so intense you forsake all others. Not just between two lovers but a mothers love too. You could imagine this sort of love being viewed as being quite twisted, selfish, dark and damaging to others, but when you look at it simplistically, it is just a love that is so pure. So pure, it has been stripped back to the rawest form, to it’s hungriest form where it just overpowers you and as I said quite literally makes you forsake all others. This is the type of love Stella has for Tom, and Elizabeth (Stella’s mother) has for Stella’s unknown father.

Whilst Stella is playing out her last ever show, wanting to know your secrets, it is clear there are many secrets kept from her. Her mother, Tom and ‘The man who knows’ all have their secrets but are they willing participants in this evening’s plans?

Not only are we dealing with secrets but we have a murderer on the loose, a pregnant woman has been murdered, Victoria, but what is it about her death that is affecting Stella and those around her so much?

For this being a first-time foray into the darkness of a thriller, it paid off. It felt like this was not Louise’s first rodeo into this world, the thrill was spot on, the darkness and intensity of the story all worked for me. All through the words that were not wasted. Every word, sentence, paragraph and page served a purpose, it was not wishy-washy, it was tight and precise and left you wanting more. The chapters are short and snappy and they flit between Stella and Elizabeth and then and now. I love this with books, they build the picture and boy was there a bigger picture to be built here.

I loved the darkness in this book, and I think about 60ish% through the book, there was a moment where I stopped what I was doing and quite simply said the words “F**k” I even sent a message to my friends, with no other words but ‘this book’. I was shocked, I did not see this revelation coming and it turned everything I thought I knew about this book on its head. Beyond epic is all I can say. I think Amazeballs is a word I generally band about too!

Call Me Star Girl was powerful, haunting and beautifully done, this will stay with me. And do not be surprised to see this in my Top books for 2019 that is for sure!

Last time I read a book by Louise I rushed out and brought all the books that she has written, I cannot do it this time but I know that I can safely say that if I hadn’t already learned the first time, that all her books in the future will be on pre-order. I am kicking myself that I have not read her other books yet, but they are sitting pretty on my shelf calling me…..or was that Stella??

Okay, I think this less than coherent fangirl message has made some sort of point I wanted to make!

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Reading updates

  • Started reading
  • 29 March, 2019: Finished reading
  • 29 March, 2019: Reviewed