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The Moment She Was Gone : A Novel by Evan Hunter
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The Moment She Was Gone : A Novel

by Evan Hunter

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411130,924 (2.83)3
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Not a very memorable book. The family is dysfunctional beyong sympathy. Stereotypes abound and it's fairly predictable. For some reason, two reviews of mine got entered and I can't delete the other. So there you have it. ( )
bookishbunny | May 16, 2006 |  
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Amazon.com (ISBN 0743459482, Mass Market Paperback)

It's an axiom of fiction as well as real life that a phone that rings in the middle of the night rarely portends good tidings. For Andy Gulliver, the protagonist of Evan Hunter's gripping new novel, it usually means that his peripatetic twin sister, Annie, is gone again, along with her tenuous hold on reality. Annie has been disappearing with no warning and reappearing just as unexpectedly ever since her adolescence, when she ran off to Sweden to find her first love, a boy she met on an earlier trip abroad with her family. However, the real, if unconscious, object of her search, as Hunter makes clear, is the father who abandoned the Gullivers years before. Annie's occasional postcards and letters from places as far-flung as Nepal and New Guinea offer just enough reassurance to enable Andy and their mother to maintain the illusion that there's nothing really wrong with her. Annie's increasing mental deterioration, like her family's implacable denial, is brilliantly depicted, and drives the narrative to its heavily foreshadowed but still shocking conclusion. Hunter, a master of suspense, is the author of 20 novels as well as countless police procedurals and detective stories, all of which are marked by the psychological acuity that suffuses this, his latest. --Jane Adams

(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:17 -0400)

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