Dead End Drive

Ready or Not Meets Agatha Christie in this transgressive, satire-laced debut.


When Agatha Benedict plucked Kelly off the city streets to replace her dead cat Poopsie, she neglected to inform him of some very important house traditions. The history of the Benedict Estate prescribes that once the estate owner passes on, a will reading is to take place. However, the reading is more than passing on a loved one's final wishes; it's a figurative gunshot into the air, an alert to all in attendance that a playful game of anything goes murder has begun. The prize? The inheritance, of course. As if visiting, a storm comes in with the guests, trapping everyone on the property for the night. While Kelly plays catch-up on with house rules, once friendly family members have already sharpened their knives. Try as he might, there is no survival if he won't play by the same rules as everyone else.


For fans of Ready or Not, this is a uniquely funny and dark murder party with big personalities. A coming-of-age story if growing up felt like being stabbed in the back by everyone you hold dear. As suspenseful as Agatha Christie's And then There Were None, as bitterly sardonic as American Psycho, and as slapstick as Clue, Dead End Drive is a black comedy and satirical look into the world of nihilism and the rat race of life we all see, but pretend we don't because... Let's be honest: is there anything more valuable than having every last need met for life?

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292 pages

Average rating: 5.4

5 RATINGS

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Community Reviews

Kwcaulkins1980
Oct 18, 2023
5/10 stars
This book if filled with a cast of horrid people all trying to last the night for a chance to inherit a Louisiana manor estate. With hints of clue as well asAnd then there were none I felt this book fell short and spent way to much time trying to hard. All to end up with an unsatisfactory climax and ending.

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