Day: April 22, 2025

Audiobook Review: The Summer House by James Patterson and Brendan DuBois

The Summer House
Authors:
James Patterson

Brendan DuBois
Narrator: Ari Fliakos
Published: June 8, 2020
Audiobook: 10 hours 19 minutes

Reviewed By: Jessica
Dates Listened To: April 7- April 12, 2025
Jessica’s Rating: 3 stars

Book Description:

One historic lake house. Seven murder victims. Four accused Army Rangers. Two versions of the truth.

Only one can survive.

Sullivan County, Georgia, belongs to Sheriff Emma Williams. But not when Army Rangers posted to the local base are implicated in a major crime. To an elite team of investigators led by Major Jeremiah Cook, the physical evidence Williams swears by presents clues to an entirely different story. The small-town sheriff has never worked a multiple homicide, and Cook knows it. Unless he can convince the locals that the recent crimes are part of a larger mystery, this outsider may never unlock the century of secrets hidden inside The Summer House.

Jessica’s Review:

Patterson is 78-years-old and has been ‘co-authoring’ his books lately. If you research these books, it appears that Patterson creates an outline for the novel while the ‘co-author’ develops the novel into what it becomes. Patterson then reviews the drafts, gives feedback and revises the novels to make sure the novels stay in his style. Of course, Patterson is the more well-known name that gets the attention of readers. It’s a ‘give and take’ collaboration that both Patterson and his co-author benefits from.

I have only read two other novels written by Patterson, both of the “Zoo” series books. The Summer House is very different from Zoo.  The Summer House is a military thriller that starts off with the murder of seven civilians, including a small child. A group of Army Rangers is implicated in the murders.

This novel just really didn’t work for me.  The characters were unlikeable for me and they consisted of stereotypes rather than multi-dimensional characters. The novel takes place in a small, fictional Georgia county and the narrator tended to exaggerate the accents of several characters.  Being I am a Georgia native my thoughts were, “We don’t all talk like this!”  

I as curious as to how the book was ultimately going to end and was happy to see one character get what they deserved.  If this had been an introduction to Patterson for me, I would not have been impressed. I would probably stick with his earlier works or if it’s a collaboration, look to see who the co-author is, and if I like that person then I would read it, such as JD Barker who has collaborated with Patterson several times. Barker has also become a named author that I will make a point to read.

I had recently listened to another novel that Ari Fliakos had narrated and he really brought more to that narration unlike The Summer House.  This was just a book that was not for me.  Maybe military thrillers are not for me. I did like the cover!

Purchase Links:
Amazon US
Amazon UK