
“If yes is no and once is never, then how many sides does a triangle have?” That quote is from Jennifer Lynn Barnes The Inheritance Games. This starting book of a soon-to-be-finished trilogy is a phenomenal novel that is filled with mind games and riddles. The Inheritance Games is a 384 page young adult mystery that kept me reading, and wanting to read, until the very end.
This book follows Avery Grambs after she inherits The Hawthorne Mansion and $46.2 billion from Tobias Hawthorne after his death. But, there’s one catch: she must live in the mansion, filled with four troublesome brothers, libraries, bowling alleys, hidden passageways, and filled to the brim with working staff, for a full year. But, she has never met Tobias or the rest of the family, and a few people want her dead for taking their inheritance. This novel has a deceptive, lovable Knives Out style plot.


Barnes also has great clues to what is about to happen. She uses riddles, memories, and games to help nudge her characters in the right direction and give the reader something to remember in case it comes into play later in the novel. If it’s in the book, it’s important, maybe not in that chapter or page, but somewhere that little piece of information is going to come into play. This Edgar Award nominee is very good at this give and take idea of writing. It’s genius level, if I’m being frank.
Some people say that The Inheritance Games is a boring and slow novel. But, I never had that problem! There are certain parts of the book that seem boring compared to higher level mystery and suspense novels, but it is a young adult novel. This book isn’t going to be like Gone Girl or And Then There Were None, mainly because those are adult suspense novels, not teen, or young adult. This is going to be more like A Good Girl’s Guide To Murder and Truly Devious because these are more targeted towards younger audiences.
