Following a nasty divorce and the trauma of being stalked, criminal defense attorney Emily Graham leaves Albany to work in Manhattan. Craving roots, she buys her ancestral home, a Victorian house in the seaside resort town of Spring Lake, New Jersey. Her family sold the house in 1892, after one of Emily's forebears, Madeline Shapley, then a young girl, disappeared.
As the house is renovated and a pool dug, a skeleton is found and identified as Martha Lawrence, a young Spring Lake woman who vanished several years ago. Within her hand is the finger bone of another woman, with a ring—a Shapley family heirloom—still on it. Determined to find the connection between the two murders, Emily becomes a threat to a seductive killer...who chooses her as the next victim.
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Creators
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Publisher
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Awards
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Release date
April 1, 2001 -
Formats
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OverDrive Listen audiobook
- ISBN: 9780743550949
- File size: 250079 KB
- Duration: 08:40:59
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Languages
- English
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Levels
- Lexile® Measure: 860
- Text Difficulty: 4-5
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Reviews
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Publisher's Weekly
April 2, 2001
Is a reincarnated serial killer at work in a New Jersey resort town more than a century after he first drew blood? That's the catchy premise that supports Clark's 24th book. In the 1890s, three young women in the upscale seaside village of Spring Lake died at the hands of an unidentified killer. In the present day, two young women have disappeared from town—and their killer, whose first-person ruminations vein the third-person narrative, is preparing to strike again. His final target will be Emily Graham, an ambitious young attorney just moved to Spring Lake from upstate New York, where she'd been victimized by a stalker. Emily is a typical Clark heroine, bright and beautiful, and the friends she makes and suspects she meets in Spring Lake are her equal in stereotype, among them a former college president with a dread secret; a failed, aging restaurateur with a much younger wife; and a hunky real-estate agent. Emily's dream of a new start in the house once owned by her ancestor—the first victim of the killer of yore—sours when the body of a present-day victim is found buried on her land along with remains of her murdered ancestor. The dream curdles further when more bodies turn up and Emily's upstate stalker reappears. This is a plot-driven novel, with Clark's story mechanics at their peak of complexity, clever and tricky. There's some nifty interplay between past and present via diaries and old books, some modest suspense, and a few genuine surprises, including the identity of both the stalker and the killer. Clark's prose ambles as usual, but it takes readers where they want to go—deep into an old-fashioned tale of a damsel in delicious distress. The first printing is one million; that, and Clark's popularity, will be enough to push this title to #1. -
AudioFile Magazine
Criminal Defense Attorney Emily Graham's prestigious job with a New York City law firm allows her to buy her old family home in Spring Lake, New Jersey. Life's promising for the young blonde divorcee until, watching the workmen digging her backyard pool, she sees them unearth two skeletons. That's when stories begin swirling about a serial killer reincarnated from her family's past--a killer who might be looking for Emily. By edging each character's voice with guilt, Jan Maxwell keeps the suspect list long to the very end. The hint of panic she introduces into simple conversations carries the listener along on a wave of suspense to the surprising climax. E.V. (c) AudioFile 2002, Portland, Maine -
AudioFile Magazine
Narrator Jan Maxwell's theatrical background comes to the fore as she portrays Emily, a criminal defense attorney pursued by an obsessed stalker. The story is further complicated by serial murders a hundred years apart. Clear enunciation, whether with accents or gender changes, makes each character believable and appropriate. Male detectives with smoke-laden voices sound professional as they dig up the crime scene in Emily's backyard. News reporters are depicted as annoying, demanding, and authoritative. Emily is rendered in crisp, businesslike tones with an undercurrent of soft femininity. Clark is known as the queen of suspense, but Maxwell also rules in the reader's role. G.D.W. (c) AudioFile 2001, Portland, Maine
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