In the heart of a traveling carnival, beneath the spinning lights and laughter, a teenage girl is found dead inside a mirror maze-her body posed, her reflection eerily untouched. Detective Harley Granger doesn't believe in accidents, especially not ones staged this carefully.
As Harley unravels the contradictions in Sheila Danvers' final moments-her poised social media presence versus the turmoil scribbled in her private notebook, her confident stride into the maze versus the soft trace of fear-she's pulled into a chilling pattern that goes far beyond a single murder.
Every clue feels curated. Every reflection holds a secret. And as another victim turns up-this one pregnant, this one even more cryptic-Harley starts to question whether the killer is constructing a series of crimes or a message. One meant for her.
House of Glass is a psychological thriller steeped in atmosphere, where identity, memory, and mirrors collide. For fans of Sharp Objects and The Silent Patient, this is a dark and lyrical journey into the fractured minds of both hunter and hunted.