Lost your way?
Your dreams?
Yourself?
Welcome to Lost.
It was supposed to be a small escape. A few hours' driving before turning around and heading home. But once you arrive in Lost…well, it's a place you really can't leave. Not until you're Found. Only the Missing Man can send you home. And he took one look at Lauren Chase and disappeared.
So Lauren is now trapped in the town where all lost things go—luggage, keys, dreams, lives—where nothing is permanent, where the locals go feral and where the only people who don't want to kill her are a handsome wild man called the Finder and a knife-wielding six-year-old girl. The only road out of town is engulfed in an impassable dust storm, and escape is impossible…
Until Lauren decides nothing—and no one—is going to keep her here anymore.
Kindle Edition, 340 pages
Published November 11, 2025
by MIRA
3.5/5 stars
The Lost is a a compelling blend of YA fantasy and magical realism, a re-release by one of my favorite go-to authors. Sarah Beth Durst builds worlds that are unique, kinda quirky and delivers relevant subject matters.
Built around a quietly unsettling premise: a town where lost things and sometimes lost people, seem to gather. When Lauren stumbles into this place, her ordinary life slips away, replaced by strange rules, unusual residents and a sense that nothing quite behaves as it should.
On one hand the atmosphere is almost dreamlike and kinda disorienting yet it is grounded enough that Lauren’s emotional journey remains relatable. It was mysterious as well with a cast of characters who each bring their own layers of intrigue and unpredictability.
Even though the pacing drifted in a few spots, overall the story delivers an imaginative escape with touches of whimsy and tension. The Lost is an engaging YA read that blends fantasy and magical realism in a thoughtful, slightly eerie way, perfect for readers who enjoy stories that sit between the real and the impossible.
On one hand the atmosphere is almost dreamlike and kinda disorienting yet it is grounded enough that Lauren’s emotional journey remains relatable. It was mysterious as well with a cast of characters who each bring their own layers of intrigue and unpredictability.
Even though the pacing drifted in a few spots, overall the story delivers an imaginative escape with touches of whimsy and tension. The Lost is an engaging YA read that blends fantasy and magical realism in a thoughtful, slightly eerie way, perfect for readers who enjoy stories that sit between the real and the impossible.
My thanks to the publisher for a digital arc (via Netgalley) in exchange for a honest review.

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