Review: The Chain by Adrian McKinty

The Chain Adrian McKinty Review

The Chain by Adrian McKintyWritten by contributor Verushka Byrow

The Chain is relentless. It does not stop from the moment you start reading as author Adrian McKinty drags readers and the protagonist, Rachel, into a furious journey to kidnap a kid and save her daughter, Kylie. It’s the kind of book that has you furiously turning pages, and then when you finish exhaling in exhaustion.

What is The Chain?

McKinty takes the concept of a chain letter and couples it with the real life stories of exchange kidnappings that happen in Mexico and came up with The Chain: parents are approached by strangers and told their child has been kidnapped. They’re instructed to pay a ransom, and kidnap another kid or their kid will be killed. Once all the instructions have been followed by everyone, their kid gets released.

There’s something profoundly disturbing about this. The people doing the kidnapping are parents themselves, who are willing to do anything to save their children—and do the anything part to the children they themselves have kidnapped—or the parents or anyone else who stands in their way. They have to, if they want their kids back alive. And all the while, there’s someone else pulling their strings. Someone who can’t be reasoned with, someone who wants money and someone who has no problem ordering kids to be killed.

And that’s where Rachel finds herself when Kylie is kidnapped.

Who is Rachel? And Kylie? And Pete?

Rachel is a mum. She’s fighting cancer, and tells bad jokes that make Kylie groan out loud, even though she enjoys them.

For all that she has her flaws, her love for her daughter is steadfast. She will do anything she has to: she’ll lie to people to get the ransom, lie to her ex in the smoothest way possible when he comes to pick up Kylie and she’s gone. She’ll kidnap a kid, and think on her feet when her plan goes awry because that’s what she has to do. And she’ll bring the kid she has chained up in a basement Kylie’s stuffed toy to comfort her.

Rachel is this fascinating mix of vulnerability over steel. For whatever you may think of her when the book starts, you’ll think of her differently by the end.

Kylie is a wonderful surprise in this: sure she’s scared, but the kid is resourceful and determined and she will do whatever she has to make sure she lives. Or escapes. Or protects her mother against The Chain.

The third person in this trio is Pete, Kylie’s ex-brother in law. He’s a former soldier, and he’s an addict and he adores Kylie. It’s to Pete that Rachel turns for help, Pete who comes through when she needs it the most—and not Marty, Kylie’s father. Marty is the kind of man who coasts through life never thinking too much about anything beyond his own little sphere of existence. He loves Kylie and he worries for Rachel, but I get the impression his mind is always on something else when he’s talking to them.

Characterisation

McKinty has written flawed characters, ones who are messed up and mess up, but what drew me to them is that they find a way through—these characters know who they are and they still continue—with paying a ransom, kidnapping a kid and comforting her in the same breath.

Characterisation, accompanied by the pacing, will draw you into their situation, and leave your heart in your mouth a couple of times, I swear. But that’s the strength of McKinty’s writing: pacing and characterisation have found this perfect mix, that has you on the edge of your seat for the three characters in an intimate, terrible way.

Then Things Go Further…

Because The Chain is more than just about the kidnapping. It’s about Rachel, Pete and Kylie risking everything—risking the wrath of The Chain in fact—and it’s wonderfully tense, heart-in-your-mouth stuff because the book builds the ruthlessness of The Chain in wonderful and painfully exquisite detail. You know what they’re risking, just like you know why they have to do it.

So, that’s The Chain. The hype machine was not wrong on this one, and it’s no wonder the movie rights have been picked up.

And yes, I am fan casting this already: Rachel Weisz and Daniel Craig for Rachel and Pete respectively. And Bella Ramsey (because I may not have watched Game of Thrones, but damn was I impressed with what I did see of her character) or Millie Bobbie Brown for Kylie. What’s your fan casting for a movie like this?

The Chain is available from Amazon, Book Depository, and other good book retailers.

Will you be checking out The Chain? Have you already? Tell us in the comments below!


Synopsis | Goodreads

THE ONLY WAY TO SAVE YOUR CHILD IS TO KIDNAP ANOTHER.

Listen carefully …
Your child has been kidnapped.
You must abduct someone else’s child to save your own.
Disobey. Break the rules. Go to the cops. Your child will die.
Your victim’s parents must kidnap another child before yours is released.
You are now part of the chain.

#DONTBREAKTHECHAIN

A book for readers who loved The Girl on the Train and Gone Girl.


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