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Never Knowing
کتاب های مرتبط
- اطلاعات
- نقد و بررسی
- دیدگاه کاربران
نقد و بررسی
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May 2, 2011
Stevens's unnerving stand-alone thriller about a woman's search for her birth parents matches the intensity of her impressive debut, Still Missing. Growing up on Vancouver Island, Sara Gallagher felt emotionally detached from her adoptive family. Now 33, Sara finally locates her birth mother, university professor Julia Laroche, but is devastated when Julia wants nothing to do with her. Sara learns that she was conceived when her birth mother was attacked by the Campsite Killer, a serial killer responsible for a 40-year reign of terror, who has never been caught. When the circumstances of Sara's birth become public, her biological father contacts her, demanding to meet her and her six-year-old daughter. If she refuses, he will continue to kill. Stevens chillingly portrays a woman searching for her identity who's not just horrified by the results but fearful she or her child has inherited violent tendencies. While the plot flirts with clichés, the skillful storytelling never flags. 150,000 first printing.
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May 1, 2011
A Canadian furniture refinisher gets much, much more than she bargained for, none of it good, when on the eve of her wedding she decides to search for her birth mother.
Sara Gallagher has never exactly been comfortable in her adopted family. Her mother-by-choice is loving and kind, but her relationships with her adoptive father and her two non-adopted sisters are rockier. So it's no wonder that she'd want to celebrate her nuptials to Evan, the rugged outdoorsman who's fathered her own daughter, 6-year-old Ally, by tracking down the mother who gave her up as a baby. All too soon, Sara learns that the art-history professor who calls herself Julia Laroche is actually her mother. So why does Julia demand that Sara stay far away from her? For that matter, why did she change her name from Karen Christianson? Sara soon discovers that her mother is the only woman to survive an assault by the Campsite Killer—an assault that occurred exactly nine months before Sara's birth. "I was born in fear," she realizes in horror. But her troubled history is the least of her problems. News of Karen's connection, and Sara's own, to the Campsite Killer swiftly leaks onto a gossip blog, spreads like wildfire and brings Sara's father ("You can call me John for now") into her life in ugly and uncontrollable ways. The man who's murdered some 30 young people had no idea he had a daughter, and he's so eager to cultivate a relationship with her—without of course allowing the omnipresent Staff Sgt. Sandy McBride and Corp. Billy Reynolds to capture him—that he makes a series of ever more impossible demands, threatening to kill again if Sara doesn't meet each and every one. Worse still, the mounting pressure leaves her feeling more and more like her father the serial killer.
As finely calculated in its escalating suspense as Stevens' grueling debut (Still Missing, 2010). Only the last twist disappoints.
(COPYRIGHT (2011) KIRKUS REVIEWS/NIELSEN BUSINESS MEDIA, INC. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.)
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February 15, 2011
Sometimes you must be really, really careful what you wish for. Sarah Gallagher wanted to find her birth parents--and discovered that her father was a serial killer who's never been caught. Stevens's debut, Still Missing, was a smash hit and especially popular with librarians. This next one has a one-day laydown on July 5, a reading group guide, and an extensive promotional campaign; definitely buy and consider multiples.
Copyright 2011 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.
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May 1, 2011
Expectations are riding high for Stevens second novel, after the breakout success of her debut, Still Missing (2010). The setup is tantalizing. Sara Gallagher has always known she was adopted, but she suddenly feels a sense of urgency about tracking down her birth parents, not only because she is about to marry the love of her life but also because she is the mother of a six-year-old and would at least like to know her own medical history. Shes on the right track when she discovers that her birth mother is a professor at a local college but is shocked and dismayed when the woman refuses to talk with her. Then Sara learns that her birth mother is the only surviving victim of the notorious Campsite Killer, who was never caught, and that he is her father. When the news is leaked on the web, Saras life becomes surreal, especially after her birth father starts calling her. Reprising the format of her first novel, Stevens has her heroine breathlessly narrate the events to a therapist; unfortunately, the gambit seems stale the second time around. In addition, a tiresome laundry list of premarital woes, an over-the-top plot twist, and an increasingly strained sense of hysteria mar what could have been a chilling plot. Still, the success of her previous novel will ensure an audience for this one. HIGH-DEMAND BACKSTORY: Chevy Stevens debut novel, Still Missing (2010), was a big hit, and her latest, despite the fact that it suffers from the dreaded sophomore slump, will have a 150,000-copy first printing, a reading group guide, and an extensive promotional campaign.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2011, American Library Association.)
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