Hidden Rooms by Kate Michaelson (with a GIVEAWAY!)

When murder hits home.
Long distance runner Riley has been fighting various bewildering symptoms for months, from vertigo to fainting spells. Worse, her doctors canāt tell her whatās wrong, leaving her to wonder if itās stress or something more threatening. But when her brotherās fiancĆ©e is killedāand he becomes the prime suspectāRiley must prove his innocence, despite the toll on her health.
As she reacquaints herself with the familiar houses and wild woods of her childhood, the secrets she uncovers take her on a trail to the real killer that leads right back to the very people she knows best and loves most.
For readers who enjoy Deer Season by Erin Flanagan, All Good People Here by Ashley Flowers, and A Flicker in the Dark by Stacy Willingham.Praise for Hidden Rooms:
"With a fresh voice and gorgeous writing, Hidden Rooms by Kate Michaelson is a stunning debut mystery that sweeps the reader along until the surprising conclusion."
~ Connie Berry, USA Today bestselling author of the Kate Hamilton Mysteries
"This remarkable debut novel expertly combines a compelling mystery with a richly drawn cast of characters and a strong, beautifully portrayed sense of place. An engaging, gripping read."
~ Andrew Welsh-Huggins, Shamus, Derringer, and International Thriller Writers award-nominated author
"Michaelsonās witty eye, sharp portrayal of illness, and twisty case make for a standout debut!"
~ Erin Flanagan, Edgar-Award winning author of Come with Me
"Hidden Rooms is a suspenseful tale full of interesting characters. This well-told story with its unexpected ending will leave the readers begging for more."
~ L. C. Hayden, award-winning author of the Bronson Thriller Series and the Aimee Brent Mystery Series
Book Links: Amazon | Barnes & Noble | BookShop.org | Goodreads | CamCat Books
Read an excerpt:
I grew up inside a lightning bolt, in a family of pure momentum. My siblings and I were young, stupid, and fearless in our white gingerbread house, surrounded by dark earth, green shoots, and wild woodsāuntamed beasts running loose from morning to night. We snarled and bucked, more a pack than a family.
Born less than a year apart, my brother Ethan and I spent most of our lives scrapping after the same few things, pinching each other where we knew it would hurt the most. But we also protected each other. When Trevor Paltree shoved Ethan off the tall metal slide the first day of preschool, I kicked Trevorās little ass, and Iād do it again.
Only, now, I didnāt know what protecting my brother looked like, though I felt fairly certain that kicking his fiancĆ©eās ass was not it. Besides, I couldnāt even say what exactly Beth was up to, which (admittedly) undermined my argument. Putting my head down and going along with the wedding might feel cowardly, but it also seemed like the least destructive path forward.
So, thatās how I found myself pulling up to Ethan and Bethās house to pick up my puce monstrosity of a bridesmaidās dress with Bethās recent words still replaying in my mind: Riley, you know Iād never do anything to hurt Ethan. The problem was that she also once said with a wink and a smile that what Ethan didnāt know couldnāt hurt him. I parked in the shade of a lowlimbed oak and got out, lifting my hair off my neck to catch the breeze. The autumn sun had built throughout the afternoon into the kind of fleetingly gorgeous day that makes up for Ohioās multitude of weather sins: one last warm postscript to summer. Rain loomed in the low shelf of clouds to the north. I crossed my fingers that it would hold off until I could get home to walk Bruno. Maybe I could even get a run in if my energy held out.
My phone buzzed, and I knew without looking it would be Audra. She called most days and knew that just the previous night, Iād finally worked up the nerve to have a conversation with Ethan about Beth. She would want the details. I was amazed she had waited this long.
āHowād it go with Ethan?ā Her melodious voice skipped along briskly. People usually went with what she said simply because they were so swept up with how she said it. As her sister, I was an exception.
āHello to you too.ā I continued toward the house but slowed my pace. āIāll give you one guess how it went.ā
āHello, dearest Riley. I guess he got mad.ā
āNot just mad. He guilt-tripped me. I asked him if heād noticed anything wrong with Beth, and he acted all injured about it. He told me, āShe thinks youāre her friend.āā I mimicked Ethanās self-righteous tone. The jab still stung. āI told him I think of her as a friend too, which is how I know sheās hiding something.ā Granted, I couldnāt untangle what it was. It was something I sensed more than sawāa shift in posture or flicker behind an expression. The past few weeks sheād become more self-contained than ever, which was saying something for her.
āYeah, but can you really be friends with someone who has no personality? Itās like being friends with a mannequin. I donāt know how you can tell if sheās hiding something when she never shares anythingāā
āLook, I canāt talk about it now.ā I lowered my voice as I neared the house. āIām at their place getting my dress. Iāll call you later.ā
I climbed the porch steps, the front of their house looking so Instagram-perfect that I wondered whether Iād been seeing problems that werenāt there. The afternoon light slanted across the pumpkins and yellow chrysanthemums that Beth had arranged just so. Dried bundles of corn rattled in the breeze. Beneath the pale-blue porch swing, Beth had set out a matching ceramic bowl full of kibble for Bibbs, the half-feral cat that had adopted her and Ethan.
The only thing amiss was the open door of the old-fashioned cast-iron mailbox nestled amid the pumpkins and flowers. Beth would kill the mail carrier for ruining the ambiance. I grabbed the few pieces of mail in the box and shut the little door obligingly, like a good future sister-in-law.
Careful not to disturb a precarious wreath of orange berries, I knocked on the screen door and tapped my foot, ready to grab my puffy dress and go. I had been a whirl of motion all day, zipping through work and crossing items off my to-do list. I worked for Wicks, an oversized candle company that sold overpriced candles. Today was my last day in the office before a trip to England to set up the IT network at our new British headquarters.
For months, Iād been fighting some kind of long-term bug my doctors couldnāt figure out, but today I felt a glimmer of my former self, twitchy with energy and moving at a clip to get everything done.
***
Excerpt from Hidden Rooms by Kate Michaelson. Copyright 2024 by Kate Michaelson. Reproduced with permission from CamCat Books. All rights reserved.

Growing up in rural Ohio, Kate Michaelson simultaneously developed a love of nature and a strong desire to live closer to a mall. Pursuing the latter, she attended Ohio State, where she studied English and Psychology. After earning her MFA in Creative Writing, Kate worked as a technical writer and taught English at St. Petersburg College in Florida and, later, at the University of Toledo in Ohio. Over the years, she has published academic articles, creative nonfiction, poetry, and short stories. Her debut novel, Hidden Rooms, follows a distance runner who returns to her rural Ohio hometown and must clear her brother of murdering his fiancĆ©e while also seeking answers to her own medical mystery. As someone with Lyme disease and dysautonomia, Kateās writing uses humor and suspense to explore the experience of coping with chronic illness. Ultimately, she wants to portray the reality of the challenges that invisible disabilities pose while also demonstrating that āabilityā is not a binary conceptāthat illness does not equal a loss of self or agency.
Kate enjoys traveling, hiking, and trying (fruitlessly) to tire out her Labrador mix. She works in curriculum design and holds a Ph.D. in Educational Psychology. She lives with her husband and pets in Toledo, Ohio, only ten minutes from a mall she now avoids whenever possible.
Catch Up With Kate Michaelson:
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Twitter/X - @KateMichaelson3
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Thanks so much for highlighting my book! I'm so happy you enjoyed the characters.
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