Review: Where Lost Girls Go by Kody Keplinger

Where Lost Girls Go by Kody Keplinger

Where Lost Girls Go
Kody Keplinger
Scholastic Press
Published July 7, 2026

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About Where Lost Girls Go

From New York Times bestselling author Kody Keplinger comes an addicting read that’s The Girls by Emma Cline meets The Scammer by Tiffany D. Jackson.

There are many reasons why six girls have ended up living with Sol in a cabin deep in the Kentucky woods. But the girls don’t talk about what has brought them each here or who they were before. The have become sisters and are grateful to have a place to call home.

Iris knows she owes everything to Sol. He has promised to keep them safe from their pasts. All he asks in return is for their loyalty, which Iris freely gives. With her sisters and Sol as her family, she feels happier than she has in a long time. Until a new girl arrives and everything changes. Sol dubs her Rose and the sisters are quick to welcome her.

Iris is drawn Rose, but as they grow closer, Rose has Iris questioning things about this life in the woods. When Sol notices, he challenges Iris to prove her commitment to their family. Her sisters tell her that she should be willing to do anything for the man who saved her. But with each new ask, Iris realizes there is more to Sol – and her sisters – than she knows, and some secret should stay buried deep.

New York Times bestselling author Kody Keplinger weaves a stunning story about girlhood, power, and desperation that asks just how far we’ll go to save ourselves – and those we love.

My Review

It’s so easy to feel for the main character, Iris. The bottom falls out of her whole world, and she’s left entirely vulnerable. As she spends more time in the cabin with Sol and the other girls, it becomes ever clearer the danger she’s in if she stays– or tries to flee.

Keplinger does an amazing job maintaining the tension in the story without ever showing any explicit physical or sexual abuse or even using profanity. The story is dark and explores dark themes. The bulk of the story follows girls living in the woods with a middle-aged man who has total control over them. They think of him as a mentor, and it’s hinted that he sleeps with at least one girl, but nothing is ever shown or overtly referenced on the page.

I haven’t read any of the author’s other books, but this one convinces me that I should put them on my reading list. This is a great book for early young adult readers interested in dark stories but who might not be ready for some of the more graphic descriptions of abuse that are common to cult-like groups.

Content Notes

Recommended for Ages 12 up.

Profanity/Crude Language Content
None.

Romance/Sexual Content
Kissing.

Spiritual Content
None.

Violent Content
Death of a parent (happens off-scene). Manipulation and abuse in a cult-like setting. One character steals items. Someone commits arson. Brief descriptions of murder. Someone demands that someone else kill a person. Two characters fight. A character has serious injuries.

Drug Content
None.

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About Kasey

Reads things. Writes things. Fluent in sarcasm. Willful optimist. Cat companion, chocolate connoisseur, coffee drinker. There are some who call me Mom.

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