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Book Summary and Reviews of The Vanishing Place by Zoë Rankin

The Vanishing Place by Zoë Rankin

The Vanishing Place

by Zoë Rankin

  • Critics' Consensus (7):
  • Readers' Rating (63):
  • Published:
  • Sep 2025, 384 pages
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About this book

Book Summary

A shocking murder in the New Zealand bush—and the witness who looks all too familiar—draws a woman back to the very place she swore she'd never return to in this breakneck debut thriller.

A child who ran from the forest.
A woman who must return to it.

Growing up with her younger siblings in the unforgiving New Zealand bush, Effie believed their parents had cut them off from civilization because they loved Nature. She never suspected that their reasons might be more menacing. After witnessing a terrifying episode of violence, she escaped the wilderness to forge a life for herself halfway across the globe.

Now, when she learns the only witness to a murder is a little girl who looks just like her, Effie is compelled to return to the scene of her troubled childhood, where the secrets of her upbringing and the terrors of her past come rushing back to the surface. In order to find out once and for all what became of her family—and possibly help this mysterious girl who could be her younger self—Effie must face her greatest fears once more.

Please be aware that this discussion guide will contain spoilers!
  1. Effie is obviously hesitant to return to New Zealand, so why does she go? Have you ever felt compelled to do something you dreaded?
  2. Children view the world differently than adults. They place an importance on different things and interpret situations differently. In which moments do you get a sense that Anya is seeing a different world than the adults around her?
  3. What does Anya do that surprised you or that, by adult standards, felt illogical?
  4. What echoes of young Effie do you see in her as an adult?
  5. Effie and Lewis are still drawn to each other after years apart. In your own experience, is first love stronger than more mature love?
  6. Why do you think Anya goes to the bridge? What is she so frightened of? ...
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Reviews

Media Reviews

"From the deep dark wilds of the New Zealand bush to searing memories of sins past, The Vanishing Place breaks new ground in a genuinely thrilling ride." —Lisa Gardner, #1 New York Times bestselling author

"A triumphant thriller...Rankin expertly manages the parallel timelines, drawing out key questions about Effie's past as the narrative toggles back and forth, and her prose is often ruggedly beautiful ("The barbed silence moved through her, as if the blades of silver fern traced her skin"). This is a must-read for fans of Jane Harper." —Publishers Weekly (starred review)

"As rich as Rankin's entrancing and skillfully developed plot are her immersive descriptions of the bush country...It's like being there yourself. You'll get lost in the wilds with this gripping debut." —Kirkus Reviews

"[A] knockout debut" —Washington Post

"Impressively original, deftly crafted, as well as a fascinating and fun read from cover to cover...All the more impressive when considering that The Vanishing Place is Rankin's debut as a novelist." —Midwest Book Review

"Richly evocative and simmering with tension, The Vanishing Place is a white-knuckle tale of evil and love." —Charity Norman, Ngaio Marsh-winning author of Remember Me

This information about The Vanishing Place was first featured in "The BookBrowse Review" - BookBrowse's membership magazine, and in our weekly "Publishing This Week" newsletter. Publication information is for the USA, and (unless stated otherwise) represents the first print edition. The reviews are necessarily limited to those that were available to us ahead of publication. If you are the publisher or author and feel that they do not properly reflect the range of media opinion now available, send us a message with the mainstream reviews that you would like to see added.

Any "Author Information" displayed below reflects the author's biography at the time this particular book was published.

Reader Reviews

Write your own reviewwrite your own review

Mary B. (St Paul, MN)

The Vanishing Place
From the first paragraph on the story builds layer upon layer. The setting is in New Zealand in a small community. Nearby, the bush becomes a central character. A mystery unfolds when a young girl appears in the community torn and tattered. Who is she and where did she come from?

A local official contacts a young woman living in Ireland, who had fled the area some 20 years ago never wanting to come back. When she does return, her story unfolds as well as the young girls. The chapter time periods go from 1988 to 2025 not in that order. Each chapter tells a bit of the story and one thinks there will be an answer, but then its on to another time frame. This makes it difficult to stop reading!!

As mentioned earlier the bush is a central character. The author is vivid in her descriptive narrative of what it is like and what happens there. Her characters and their feelings are very real.

There are twists and turns in the story, as well as some dark material all central to story.
Very engrossing story. It is a mystery/thriller but also a strong story of human endurance and emotional connections. I look forward to more books by this author.

Margaret S. (Lincoln, NE)

A great read
This book is about a family that lives deep in a forest in a hut is totally absorbing. The characters are richly developed and there are mysteries (note plural) within mysteries—beginning with a young girl, bloody and bedraggled, wandering into to town. This results in the one person who escaped from the family returning to the small town. She gets caught up in solving the girl's identity plus other murders and family secrets. The final chapters surprised me as the family history is resolved. A great read. I didn't want to put it down.

Deborah_G

New Zealand Intrigue
Zoë Rankin's The Vanishing Place is a location where fear, isolation, and complex family secrets reign. Who is the young girl caught frantically devouring strawberries at a grocery store in Koraha, New Zealand in 2025? What is her relationship to Effie, who currently lives in Island of Skye, Scotland? We piece this together from flashes of Effie's experiences in New Zealand in the early 2000s and her 2025 return to help police locate her childhood home in the bush in hopes of determining the girl's identity. Switching back and forth between snatches of the past and present is an effective way to build suspense, but the author's introduction of a third timespan about three-quarters of the way through the book adds confusion with many new twists and turns. In the end, it is the depth of the young girl's and Effie's characters and their relationship that make this novel worth reading.

Sara_S

A Gripping Debut
Beginning at its first page, the writing captures the reader with its pervasive atmosphere of suspense and foreboding. For a debut, this is simply amazing in both its subtlety and starkness. As someone who has been well "off the beaten path" a time or two, the wilderness scenes and psychological twists and turns are convincing. This gripping tale takes its reader to many dark places while offering much affirmation of love and examinations of loyalty in its many guises, placing this thriller on a higher plain.

Rebecca_Gaulton

Amazing
Wow, what a book. The story begins with Effie watching as her mother dies from childbirth. As her father becomes more and more distant Effie is left trying to raise her baby brother along with her other siblings. Fast forward to Effie living a life as an adult far away from New Zealand and her difficult childhood. But another child wanders out of the bush in New Zealand and Effie is called back to try and discover how this child might tie into her past and to finally discover what became of her father and siblings. The ending is powerful and unexpected. I truly went through the gamut of emotions with this book.

Debra_F

The Vanishing
Set in New Zealand, which I know nothing about. It was a wonderful thriller! Secrets, the consequences of those secrets. One Girl Lost. One Girl Found, it says in the description and the story that unfolds is compelling.

I'm a sucker for dual timelines & loved the way the story unfolded. There were surprises & just when I thought I had it all figured out...I was wrong. Happily.

Thank you BookBrowse for an arc of this book. Highly recommended!

...25 more reader reviews

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More Information

Zoë Rankin grew up in a village in Scotland. She studied International Relations and Arabic before going on to qualify as a primary school teacher. She spent many years travelling in Europe, Asia, the Middle East, and Africa, and eventually settled in New Zealand. She has always been passionate about writing as well as spending time outdoors and exploring by bike, often with her two small children who are equally adventurous.

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