Wednesday, October 29, 2025

Crash Landing

Kathryn Johnson wrote over 40 published novels in her career, most under pseudonyms like Nicole Davidson. She actively contributed to young-adult horror and suspense published under Avon's Avon Flare paperback imprint. That's where I initially discovered her book Winterkill, published by the company in 1991. I later read her 1995 novel Crash Course and discovered there was a sequel published a year later titled Crash Landing.

Crash Landing picks up the action just a few months after the events from Crash Course. Protagonist Kelly and her friends Isobel, Angel, Chris, Jeff, and Nathan have all returned to Deep Creek Lake, the location of the first book, for a ski trip hosted by their high school. But, Kelly keeps remembering the events that caused the drowning death of her best friend Brian.

In this book, readers learn that Paula, the “killer” from the first book, was sentenced to a long-term psychiatric hospital stemming from her involvement in Brian's drowning and the attempted murder of Nathan and Kelly. But, oddly enough, Kelly runs into Paula on the ski slopes. Paula offers a sincere reproach to Brian's death and says the doctors rehabilitated her and she's out now and ready to move on with her life. Kelly believes her and welcomes the girl back into the group.

Later, Paula is stabbed to death by an unknown assailant. This kicks off a chain of events involving two police officers investigating Paula's murder. The investigation then connects to a drug-running investigation involving several of the high school kids on the ski trip. Kelly is arrested, but it's a ploy to get the real killer out in the open.

Crash Landing is a bit of a mess in terms of disjointed plot, but it does offer plenty of red herrings and an interesting central mystery that affects Kelly. I was often contemplating something from the first book and how the significance may play a role in this novel. Unfortunately, there aren't many things connecting the two books, which led me to suspend disbelief that these unfortunate, nearly fatal incidents, could all happen to the same people again. However, at just shy of 200-pages, the book breezes by and is fairly enjoyable. A very mild recommendation if you enjoy young-adult suspense.

Get the book HERE.

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