Girl, Forgotten: A Novel

4.3 4.3 out of 5 stars | 20,207 ratings

Price: 1.99

Last update: 01-27-2025


About this item

Don’t miss the next Will Trent thriller, This Is Why We Lied, coming this August! 

NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER!

“It’s Slaughter’s prodigious gifts of characterization that make her stand out among thriller writers.”   — Washington Post

From the New York Times bestselling author of Pieces of Her, comes an electrifying thriller featuring newly minted US Marshal Andrea Oliver as she investigates a cold case with links to her father’s past. 

A small town hides a big secret…

Who killed Emily Vaughn?

A girl with a secret…

Longbill Beach, 1982. Emily Vaughn gets ready for the prom. For an athlete, who is smart, pretty and well-liked, this night should be the highlight of her high school career. But Emily has a secret. And by the end of the evening, that secret will be silenced forever. 

An unsolved murder…

Forty years later, Emily’s murder remains a mystery. Her tight-knit group of friends closed ranks; her respected, wealthy family retreated inwards; the small town moved on from her grisly attack. But all that’s about to change.

One final chance to uncover a killer…

US Marshal Andrea Oliver arrives in Longbill Beach on her first assignment: to protect a judge receiving death threats. But, in reality, Andrea is there to find justice for Emily. The killer is still out there—and Andrea must discover the truth before she gets silenced, too…



From the Publisher

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Pretty Girls
The Good Daughter
Pieces of Her
Girl, Forgotten
False Witness
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This is Why We Lied
The Kept Woman
The Last Widow
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After That Night
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Top reviews from the United States

  • V. Jones
    5.0 out of 5 stars Book 2: A very good, if dense, mystery thriller that connects the lives of two woman over 40 years.
    Reviewed in the United States on August 13, 2022
    I want to preface my review by saying that when I purchased ‘Girl, Forgotten’ by Karin Slaughter, it was described on Amazon as being a ‘standalone thriller’, so I assumed that there were no tie-ins to her other books. I was mistaken. ‘Girl, Forgotten’ follows Andrea Oliver from ‘Pieces of Her’, just grown up and newly graduated from the United States Marshall Services (USMS). I haven’t read ‘Pieces of Her’ or watched the Netflix adaption, so there were elements that I felt were underdeveloped by the end of the book. However, I am assuming that they may be addressed in ‘Pieces of Her’ so I have added that book to my TBR pile and will edit this review once I get around to reading it. ‘Girl, Forgotten’ is a richly developed story and even without reading ‘Pieces of Her’, I didn’t feel disoriented with the narrative.

    Set in the fictional town of Longbill Beach, Maryland, the book begins on April 17, 1982, where the 17-year-old and pregnant Emily Vaughn is getting ready to attend her senior year high school prom. Emily has been ostracised by her former friends and expelled from high school due to her pregnancy, but she refuses to just disappear. Her only emotional support is her Gram who unfortunately suffers from dementia and can’t protect Emily from the hardships she is enduring. Emily makes her way to the prom, and we meet several characters along the way who pose a threat to her and the baby. Sadly, by the end of the evening, she became the victim of a brutal attack that leads to her death, with the perpetrator remaining a mystery in the intervening years.

    Jump to forty years later and Andrea has just completed the gruelling 20-week course to become a United States Marshall and join the USMS. Andrea had struggled to find her place in the world since she found out two years prior that her parents were not who she thought they were. Her mother, Laura, had hidden the fact that Andrea’s biological father was a psychopathic cult leader whom she had turned into the police. The fallout from this admission had shaken Andrea’s world apart and she is now trying to move forward, one foot in front of the other. Andrea is assigned to protect a federal judge who has received credible death threats, however, this is just a cover, her real mission is to discover the truth of Emily Vaughn’s murder and uncover if it has any ties to her own past.

    The narrative jumps back and forth between Emily and Andrea and through the alternating chapters, we discover long-hidden secrets that ripple between the two women. With Emily, we go back six months before the prom as she learns of her pregnancy and the innocence of her youth begins to be stripped away. Andrea journeys to Longbill Beach and starts to unearth the mystery of what happened to Emily on that fateful night forty years ago. She discovers that there are forces at work who will do anything to keep the secrets of that night hidden and comes face-to-face with evil. As the two women move towards the finale, the intricate dance of their journeys is tangibly interconnected even over the decades separating them.

    Emily’s character undergoes a transformative process throughout the book. Whilst she has a rather privileged life, it only looks perfect from the outside. Her parents are rather neglectful and abusive in their own ways, and the only person who offers her unconditional love and support is her Gram. But, with her Gram suffering from dementia and having fewer lucid moments, Emily turns to her friends for support. Referred to as the ‘clique’ and friends since childhood, this is the group that Emily believes in unconditionally. However, she quickly becomes disillusioned by their selfishness and conceit, realising that the rose-coloured glasses of her childhood cannot withstand the transition into adulthood. Faced with the reality of being a pregnant teenager and seeing the life she longed for fall apart, Emily must quickly grow up. As the layers of her childhood are ripped away, the true strength of her character shines through. What happens to Emily made my heart break. This was someone who went from being rather naïve to someone who found their inner strength to fight for themself and their baby.

    Andrea is an interesting protagonist. She hasn’t become a deputy marshal due to a burning desire for justice, but rather as a protective measure against her father. That doesn’t stop her from giving her all to the judge’s protective detail or the case of Emily’s murder. She is not perfect and makes mistakes, but, like Emily, she has the strength of character and courage to follow her convictions. I do wish she had not referred to her USMS training as much as she did throughout the book. Every time she had to investigate something new, you could almost guarantee she would mention or think about her USMS training, after a while, it got slightly repetitive and redundant. There were also some elements to her backstory that weren’t fully explored, however, I think these might have been contained in ‘Pieces of Her’ which I hadn’t realised was the first book in the series.

    Overall, I enjoyed reading ‘Girl, Forgotten’. The story is dark and complex, with the mystery multi-layered and compelling. I will say that it was rather dense in terms of subject matter, and it does contain a range of triggering elements to be aware of. Our two main characters, Emily and Andrea are well-written and developed. Both women are bought to life by Ms Slaughter, and I felt a connection with them. The background characters were also detailed and have enough substance to make them come to life. I do need to give a special mention of Bible whom I just loved. I would happily read a spin-off series from his POV any day. I highly recommend the book to anyone who has read and enjoyed other books written by Ms Slaughter, or who enjoys a good murder mystery/suspense novel.

    4.5 out of 5 stars! Rounded to 5 stars.

    ‘Girl, Forgotten’ is the second book in the Andrea Oliver series by Karin Slaughter. As of August 2022, the series consists of:

    Book 1: Pieces of Her
    Book 2: Girl, Forgotten
  • Julie Merilatt
    4.0 out of 5 stars A solid second in Slaughter's series
    Reviewed in the United States on September 11, 2022
    Andrea Oliver and her volatile mother Laura are back. After everything that Andrea learned about her mom in Pieces of Her, Andrea decides to join the US Marshals. Interestingly, she is tasked with pinning a decades-old murder on her Manson-esque father to guarantee he remains incarcerated indefinitely. This assignment takes her to a small town in Delaware, where she gets a new partner and the cover of guarding a judge who has been receiving death threats. The judge’s daughter Emily is the title character and she was brutally murdered as a teenager in 1982. If that wasn’t tragic enough, Emily was pregnant when she was attached and was kept alive long enough for her daughter to come to term. Could Emily’s daughter be Andrea’s half-sister? That’s what Andrea intends to find out.

    I liked the dynamic between Andrea and her new partner Bible. If the series continues, that will be an entertaining aspect. The way Slaughter introduced us to a teenage version of Andrea’s dad was clever and presented an interesting background to his manipulativeness. This wasn’t as dark or depraved as some of Slaughter’s other books, but it was still entertaining. It offered good character development for Andrea, which will give her more of a backbone and personality in any future Andrea Oliver books. If you love Slaughter, you’ll like this.
  • bott
    5.0 out of 5 stars Great read
    Reviewed in the United States on January 19, 2025
    I love all of Karin slaughters books. She has a way of reeling you in and keeping you engaged. Awesome read...would love it if she did a series on Agent Andrea Oliver.
  • Maribeth
    3.0 out of 5 stars Slow but sure.
    Reviewed in the United States on December 3, 2024
    I choose to give this book 3 stars because it took me so long to finish it. I am not sure if it took so long bc it was on my tablet & not a physical book. But I had questions after finishing it. Why were the women at the farm starving? Why did they not agree to see a Dr. about their emaciated bodies? Why did they stay on the farm & what was the metal ankle bracket about? Never answered these questions ever.
  • Kat Johnson
    4.0 out of 5 stars Emily vs the clique
    Reviewed in the United States on May 23, 2023
    Ok, I did love this book, but it was not my favorite. It seemed to drag on a bit. However, still a very good book! Karin Slaughter is amazing! Again, there is always that loveable , goofy, corny dad joke telling person, and in this book it was Marshall Bible. This book did hit on a few different stories, the death of a young girl who was pregnant which took place back in the 80s, then the current death of a young girl who ended up being in a cult. I did not mind the back and forth but again, I did feel that this story kind of dragged a bit. I did not see this person being the killer, that was a surprise. And Holy Crap - the call she got at the end!!! Woah!!! That was creeeeepy!!
  • T Roderick
    5.0 out of 5 stars Great story!
    Reviewed in the United States on December 30, 2024
    I really enjoyed reading this one. What a tangled mess! With friends like the clique, who needs enemies? I thought I knew who Emily's killer was, but I wasn't sure until the end.
  • Debbie McAlister
    5.0 out of 5 stars This is Great!
    Reviewed in the United States on January 15, 2025
    Really didn’t want this one to end. Such a good storyline and very interesting characters. Hopefully there’s more to come
  • Texas Student
    4.0 out of 5 stars scintillating
    Reviewed in the United States on December 3, 2024
    Kept me reading….twists & turns. But I hate the ending. Too much left undone Nonetheless, a good read, worth my time

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