Format: 315 pages, Paperback
Release Date: May 12, 2026
Publisher: Thomas & Mercer
Source: Publisher
Genre: Mystery, Suspense
Revised edition: Previously published as Anywhere She Runs, this edition of The Drowning Season includes editorial revisions.
To find two missing women, a detective must dive into the secrets of her past in a blood-freezing novel of suspense by USA Today bestselling author Debra Webb.
Detective Adeline Cooper swore she’d never return to Mississippi, where her corrupt family rules through fear and her career was upended by betrayal. But then she receives a photograph of a local woman who has gone missing, along with a cryptic, chilling message: Pretty, pretty princess. See her smile…see her die.
Soon after Adeline arrives in her hometown, a second woman is kidnapped, and there are disturbing connections between the two victims and the detective. Both women bear an eerie resemblance to Adeline and share her fear of water. A new message makes the kidnapper’s game terrifyingly clear: You’re next.
When past and present collide at the river’s edge, Adeline will finally understand why she’s been dreaming of drowning her whole life.
To find two missing women, a detective must dive into the secrets of her past in a blood-freezing novel of suspense by USA Today bestselling author Debra Webb.
Detective Adeline Cooper swore she’d never return to Mississippi, where her corrupt family rules through fear and her career was upended by betrayal. But then she receives a photograph of a local woman who has gone missing, along with a cryptic, chilling message: Pretty, pretty princess. See her smile…see her die.
Soon after Adeline arrives in her hometown, a second woman is kidnapped, and there are disturbing connections between the two victims and the detective. Both women bear an eerie resemblance to Adeline and share her fear of water. A new message makes the kidnapper’s game terrifyingly clear: You’re next.
When past and present collide at the river’s edge, Adeline will finally understand why she’s been dreaming of drowning her whole life.
The Drowning Season by Debra Webb is a gripping Southern Gothic-tinged psychological thriller. It’s a revised and re-edited edition of her earlier novel Anywhere She Runs. Detective Adeline “Addi” Cooper has built a life far from her Mississippi hometown, a place she swore she’d never return to. Her powerful, corrupt family rules through fear and intimidation, and a devastating betrayal years earlier shattered her career and heart.
But when she receives a chilling photo of a missing local woman—accompanied by the taunting message “Pretty, pretty princess. See her smile…see her die”—Addi is pulled back into the nightmare. Soon, a second woman vanishes. Both victims eerily resemble Addi (blond hair, blue eyes) and share her deep-seated fear of water. As the kidnapper’s messages escalate, Addi teams up with Wyatt Henderson, the local sheriff and her former love, to unravel the case.
The investigation forces her to confront long-buried family secrets, generational trauma, and the reason she’s been plagued by dreams of drowning her entire life. The river that runs through the town becomes both a literal and symbolic force—beautiful, dangerous, and unforgiving. Webb excels at making the Mississippi river town feel like a character itself. The humid, swampy vibe, the looming family estates, and the constant presence of water create a claustrophobic, moody backdrop that amplifies the dread.
The drowning motif is woven throughout masterfully—psychologically, thematically, and plot-wise. For the most part, Adeline is a flawed lead—tenacious, angry, guarded, and carrying heavy emotional baggage. Her personal stakes make the thriller intensely personal rather than just procedural. The book moves quickly with cryptic clues, escalating danger, and plenty of twists. The book explores betrayal (familial and romantic), the weight of the past, and the depravity hidden behind respectable facades.
The “pretty princess” taunts add an eerie, personal creep factor. The rekindled relationship with Wyatt adds emotional layers and tension, but can feel secondary or distracting for readers who prefer pure thrillers without romance. If you enjoy thrillers where the protagonist’s return home unearths more than just a case—where the past literally tries to drown the present—this one will keep you up at night.







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