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Loading... Die zweite Schwester (original 2017; edition 2018)by Claire Kendal (Author), Sybille Uplegger (Übersetzer)
Work InformationThe Second Sister by Claire Kendal (2017)
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Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. No current Talk conversations about this book. Psychological thrillers have been my books of choice for a lot of this year. I wanted to like this one more than I did though. Ella has lived the last 10 years haunted by what happened to her older sister Miranda. She shares custody of Miranda’s son Luke, now 10 with her parents and as he’s gotten older, he has more questions about what happened to his mother. Did she just leave, run away or did something more sinister happen? With the 10,year of her disappearance, Ella becomes obsessed with what happened to Miranda and sets out, determined to find the answers. The plot itself was fine; add a crazy ex friend, a rocky relationship with an ex, a creepy serial killer and Ella making some pretty stupid decisions to the mix. I had a slow start to this one and at times I found it all over the place; the story didn’t flow for me. Still an ok read, have just read many better of this genre. no reviews | add a review
Fiction.
Literature.
Suspense.
Thriller.
HTML: An obsessive quest to solve the mystery of her older sister's disappearance puts a young woman in mortal jeopardy in this taut, sophisticated novel of psychological suspense from the author of the "truly riveting" (New York Times) The Book of You. An intoxicating cocktail of loyalty and secrets, lies and betrayal, reminiscent of Rosamund Lupton's Sister and Kimberly McCreight's Reconstructing Amelia. A decade ago, Ella Brooke's older sister, Miranda, vanished without a trace. With every passing year, Ella has come to resemble more closely the sister she lostâ??the same dark hair, the same piercing blue eyesâ??and now she's the same age Miranda was when she disappeared. Ella has never let go of her sister. She can still feel Miranda's presence, still hear her voice. She still talks to her. What holds Ella together is her love for her sister's ten-year-old son and her work as a self-defense expert helping victims. Ella is certain that Miranda was taken, and that one man is key to her disappearance: Jason Thorne. The tabloids report that a new link has been found connecting Miranda to this sadistic serial killer locked away in a psychiatric hospital. Ignoring warnings from the police and the disapproval of her parents, she seeks Thorne out. Ella will do whatever it takes to uncover the truthâ??no matter how dangerou No library descriptions found. |
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Google Books — Loading... GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)813.6Literature English (North America) American fiction 21st CenturyLC ClassificationRatingAverage:
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^^ Psychological thrillers are really my thing at the moment. I'd heard a lo
t about this author's first book, but did not get to read it, so I made sure I read this as soon as I could. Was it as good as I expected? Mostly.
^^ I really liked Ella's character and unraveling the story behind her sister Miranda's disappearance was both exciting and scary. In my search to guess who might be involved with her sister, this book brought loads of questions to the surface, and I thoroughly enjoyed it.
^^ Ella's relationship with her nephew Luke was positively charming, in fact, we go to know her mum and dad really well, too. I liked that. It provided a lot of background information about what they had been going through since their daughter's disappearance. For some this may have been a slow burner, but I think in this instant it worked in Claire Kendal's favour.
^^ What did make me angry, (spoiler alert, continue at your peril) is the obvious reference of Ella and Jason's relationship to that of Clarice and Hannibal's relationship
in Silence of the Lambs (this was meant to happen, since there was even a mention of the pigs eating evidence on purpose, even though this had nothing to do with the story). Then there was the scary prison scene where Ella goes to talk to Jason (a clinically insane man) and he gets to her, right up close and personal to give her a clue to her sister's whereabouts. Then, guess what? He escapes and later a letter arrives for her from him saying how much he admires her and he'd always be watching and looking after her; clearly not always from afar. An obvious continuation of the SotL theme. Well, that really finished me off. Is this just me? Does this not bother anyone else? I mean, I've heard the saying - 'there's nothing new under the sun', but really? It wasn't even subtle, this was straight out of SotL. Had it not been for these moments I would have given this The Second Sister 5 stars. Until then, I had really enjoyed this book. I tried to think why this bothers me so much
. I guess I just feel a little cheated. Like the author thinks we're too stupid to notice what she's done?
Overall: SotL aside, I'm still happy to recommend this. Surprised? I bet you are! It hooked me from the beginning, developed well and I raced to the end eager to find a resolution. Despite my rant, this is a really fun page-turner. Mostly. ( )