Who are you when no one is watching?
Danya Kukafka is a graduate of New York University's Gallatin School of Individualized Study. She currently works as an assistant editor at Riverhead books. Girl in Snow is her first novel.
From its startling opening line right through to its stunning
conclusion, Girl in Snow is a perfectly-paced and tautly-plotted
thriller. Danya Kukafka's misfit characters are richly drawn, her
prose is both elegant and eerie – this is an incredibly
accomplished debut
*Paula Hawkins, author of The Girl on the Train and Into
the Water *
A sensational debut - great characters, mysteries within mysteries,
and page-turning pace. Highly recommended
*Lee Child, bestselling author of the Jack Reacher
series*
An exciting debut from a talented new voice. Girl in Snow is a
propulsive mystery set in a suburban community marked by unsettling
voyeurism. Danya Kukafka patiently reveals layers of her
characters’ inner lives – their ugliness and vulnerabilities – in
prose that sparkles and wounds. I couldn’t put this one down.
*Brit Bennett, New York Times bestselling author of The
Mothers*
'Girl in Snow is a haunting, lyrical novel about love, loss, and
terror. Reading it felt like entering another world, where things
and people – were not as they at first appeared. The world Kukafka
so masterfully creates is suspenseful and electrifying; I was
willing to follow her wherever she took me.'
*Anton DiSclafani, New York Times bestselling author of
The Yonahlossee Riding Camp for Girls and The After
Party*
There is a frightful truth to Danya Kukafka's characterizations,
and the mystery at the heart of Girl in Snow is so elegantly
constructed. It's an exceptional, unnerving debut novel. I'm
already counting the days until her next one
*Owen King, author of Double Feature and co-author of
Sleeping Beauties*
A bevy of young female characters have lent girlish titles to crime
novels since 2012’s Gone Girl. Some of these books have been
memorable, some forgettable. Few have been as noteworthy as
first-time novelist Danya Kukafka’s elegiac and involving Girl in
Snow . . . [it] is engagingly told, in fragmentary fashion, through
short sections that shift in and out of sequence. Ms. Kukafka uses
this technique to heighten suspense, and the book springs a number
of well-timed surprises . . . the predominant tone is one of
abiding sadness, in young and old alike: for people gone away
forever, for loves that might have been but weren’t. And then
there’s guilt, or the fear of guilt . . . The novel solves its
major mystery in plausible fashion. But its endearing characters’
struggles linger in memory after this affecting work is done
*Wall Street Journal*
Combining elements of Bill Clegg’s Did You Ever Have a Family with
Dennis Lehane’s contemporary classic Mystic River, Danya Kukafka’s
debut novel is an intricate, seductive murder mystery, in which a
single awful crime exposes conflicts and traumas in an entire
community . . . Told largely over the course of a few winter days
following Lucinda’s murder, Girl in Snow unfolds through deftly
alternating chapters, through the eyes of many different characters
. . . each of these lives paints a vivid, compelling canvas . . .
Girl in Snow is not just an impressive debut but one of the best
literary mysteries to come along in some time
*BookPage*
Kukafka attempts to subvert preconceptions, principally of what is
expected of the thriller genre, but succeeds more pointedly in
destabilizing the biases toward illegal immigration, mental
illness, law enforcement, and presentations of sexuality sewn into
our country’s fabric . . . Kukafka expertly plays with the
idealization of the golden girl . . . In many ways, the book
responds to our cultural norms of self-presentation and societal
expectation. By weaving these narrative perspectives together, all
directed at the image of a dead female body, we gain heightened
intimacy and understanding of three unique psychologies and are
also forced to reckon with our own preconceived notions of beauty,
gender, mental ability, and various manifestations of power.
*Guernica*
Riveting . . . stark and striking . . . written with raw immediacy,
each character is complex, aching and ashamed, for different
reasons . . . [Kukafka's] measured pacing and withholding of
information gives her novel an atmosphere of nearly painful
suspense . . . a quietly taut thriller concerned with the secrets
we keep from our closest loved-ones and even from ourselves . . .
keeps hold of the reader long after the final denouement
*Shelf Awareness*
This brooding and intense thriller will plunge readers into a dark
world they may not want to enter - but they may be unable to tear
themselves free . . . gives readers a different look into the
idyllic, small-town life, and how not everything is as it appears
on the surface
*Booklist*
Captivating
*Marie Claire*
Author Danya Kukafka, only 25 years old, began writing her
thrilling debut while studying at NYU. With a knack for writing
oh-so-real teenage characters and underline-worthy prose, she
weaves a tale of voyeurism and obsession that's impossible to put
down
*W Magazine*
A must-read . . . suspenseful and thrilling . . . an unforgettable
first novel you won't want to miss
*Book People Blog*
Danya Kukafka makes a compelling case for the next Girl on the
Train with a fast-paced thriller about a young girl whose body is
found on a school playground in the dead of winter, leaving an
obsessive loner, a jealous classmate, and a police officer as the
prime suspects. It's no surprise then that it garnered an accolade
from Paula Hawkins herself
*InStyle*
Starts with a dead high school student and keeps you glued to your
seat right up until the finish.
*Campus Circle*
If you loved Paula Hawkins' The Girl on the Train, then you
shouldn't miss this thriller
*Southern Living*
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