The publisher's summary:
They all had a reason. Only one had the nerve.Twenty years ago, student Daisy Harrington went out for the evening and never came home. Her body was found a week later. The killer was caught. Case closed.Now, on what would have been her fortieth birthday, her five university housemates are invited to a weekend gathering. None of them want to go. But none of them can refuse—the invitation makes it clear that if they don’t attend, the past they’ve spent two decades hiding will finally come to light.Because the man convicted of Daisy’s murder was innocent. And one of the five has known this all along. As the weekend unfolds, the truth threatens to finally be revealed…They all wanted Daisy dead, but one wanted it more. The question is…who? And why?
The story's suspenseful beginning had me hooked. First one ex-roommate of Daisy’s received the invitation to her 40th birthday party. Then the next and the next and the next. All of them thought about their college secrets so it was impossible to determine who the whodunnit was at this point in the story. The weekend birthday celebration was sponsored by a true crime podcast called The Killer Question. The podcast looks at unsolved crimes as well those where there has been a conviction. If the podcasters believe the wrong person is incarcerated they will investigate the crime and find the real killer. In Daisy’s case, they believe the wrong man was convicted.
As the plot moved forward, each roommate seemed to me to be her real killer. The chapters alternated between their perspectives. Maddie, Lauren, Dan, Alex and Georgie seemed innocent enough but each feared their secret being exposed. If they were smart, the roommates would have spoken with each other and decided as a group not to go to this party. I eventually settled on Lauren as my prospective whodunnit. She continued to think about her actions during the night Daisy died as evidence of her guilt. Was she just the obvious choice? I can't say.
All of these characters were ridiculously stupid. None of them should have attended the party but once they were there, they made one bad remark after another. Georgie was my favorite character. She broke up with Alex while in college and married Dan for financial security but ruled over him harshly. Georgie also talked alot about violence toward people she didn't like and she was highly excitable. In my mind she was the bright star among the other milquetoast characters. However, she made a mistake with Alex. He became a tech billionaire. Lauren was an author who was planning to write a non-fiction book about Daisy’s murder. When the friends spoke about wanting to leave early, in order to prevent them from leaving Lauren reasoned with them to stay. The longer the roommates stayed at the party the more treacherous it became for each of them.
Wanting Daisy Dead was a quick read. Each twist in the story made me think and this notched up my enjoyment of the book. 5 out of 5 stars.
