The Women In White By Sarah Pekkanen

First of all, note that Project Stargate is real: a government backed program where scientists investigated psychic phenomena, specifically remote viewing for intelligence gathering. That alone makes this story feel unsettlingly plausible. Each chapter opens with factual inserts tied to those experiments, and while this is fiction, there’s enough truth threaded through the pages to make everything feel possible. In this novel, Dr. Trimble identifies four women, Betty, Kathleen, Ivy, and Helen, who appear to possess mental abilities operating outside the known laws of physics, allowing them to sense or gather information remotely. The testing is relentless, invasive, and without clear limits… and then suddenly, the women vanish and the program is erased. Enter Riley, newly divorced and running from a dangerous ex, who takes a caretaker job with Betty, now elderly, wheelchair bound, and seemingly frozen in the 1960s. Betty has been shielded from the modern world by her late husband, and the reasons why quickly become another mystery. As Riley settles in, the questions pile up, and together they begin searching for answers, especially what happened to the other three women in white.

This book gave me everything I wanted. And while I’ve enjoyed everything Sarah Pekkanen writes, this one feels like she’s leveling up again. We move between 1964 and present day with multiple POVs, mainly Riley and Betty, but we also get glimpses into Kathleen, Ivy, and Helen. We see what brought them to the university, their growing friendships, the psychological toll of the experiments, and the lasting repercussions of being treated like test subjects instead of people. The emotional weight here runs deep, the bond between the women, the confusion surrounding their abilities, and the long term trauma that follows them into the future.

I loved the mix of historical fiction and domestic thriller layered with eerie psychological suspense. It is a slow burn, atmospheric, quietly creepy story that builds tension through questions; and the most unsettling part is the idea that this could have happened. Honestly, how many times can I say I loved this? Because I loved the friendships, I loved the creeping dread, I loved the emotional depth, I loved the bond between Riley and Betty and I especially loved how believable it all felt. Give me strong mysterious women, questionable science, and buried secrets any day. This one absolutely delivered.


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