The Hong Kong Widow


The last author who made me feel this off-kilter after finishing one of their books was Catriona Ward, so kudos to Kristen Loesch for playing pinball with my head so successfully for the last few days. I hope it was fun up there!


Ultra-brief synopsis: a Chinese woman living in Hong Kong named Mei with a gift of the “Sight” is seen as a young girl, a young woman and an older woman in alternating chapters trying to grapple with the events of her past. From a young age her gift has enabled her to see ghosts - some of whom she knows and some she doesn't. In the past she was invited as one of six mediums to attend a competition at a haunted mansion that ended badly. Decades later, she's now trying to make sense of that night and the bigger picture of her life.


I’m so glad I stuck with this book. I was considering DNF’ing after the first 25% because it had three timelines going and I couldn’t make much sense of any of them, in addition to it being very slow. My advice: Don’t read the blurb. At least not for the U.S. version. It says way too much yet still somehow gave me the wrong impression of what I’d be reading. 


What I thought I’d be reading was a creepy ghost story with a continual sense of supernatural menace centered on a long-ago massacre. I thought it would stay more consistently in the lane of horror.  What I got was a historical fiction/mystery/drama with sprinkles of supernatural horror throughout set in the time of the Japanese invasion of China beginning in 1937, the fictional tragic competition in 1953, and an investigation into that event in 2015.


Don’t get me wrong - the creepy ghosts, supernatural menace and horror were there, but it was dabbled between an unexpectedly emotional story about life. I was expecting literal and what I got was more metaphorical in the end.


So you must think I’d be disappointed. Quite the contrary! Sometimes what you think you want and what you unexpectedly end up enjoying are two different things! I won’t say too much, other than to say that the ghosts in this story serve a purpose beyond just being there to creep you out and I think it’s truly worth finding out why.


If you want a ghost story that leaves you with some deeper things to think about, I highly recommend this. Don’t read the author’s note ahead of time, but do read it after. It’s very insightful!


★★★★ 


Thanks to Berkley Publishing, NetGalley and author Kristen Loesch for this digital ARC to honestly review. It’s due to be published on October 7, 2025.



 

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