Sister Dear
The crime thriller in 2020 that will have you OBSESSED
-
- CHF 2.00
Beschreibung des Verlags
Beauty. Wealth. Success.
She's got it all.
And it all should've been mine.
'A stunning achievement! Beautifully plotted story with characters that left a mark'
Samantha Downing, author of #1 bestseller, My Lovely Wife
When Eleanor Hardwicke's beloved father dies, her world is further shattered by the discovery of a gut-wrenching secret: the man she's grieving isn't her biological dad.
With her personal life spiralling, a desperate Eleanor seeks out the family she never knew she had, finding an infuriatingly enviable half-sister.
Perfectly perfect Victoria has everything Eleanor could ever dream of. Loving childhood, luxury home, devoted husband. And this gets Eleanor thinking - aren't good sisters supposed to share?
PRAISE FOR SISTER DEAR
'Sister Dear drew me in, had me hooked and I was never really sure what to expect or who to trust. I thought it was dark, twisty, compelling and also heartbreaking. Unputdownable.
Karen Hamilton, bestselling author of The Perfect Girlfriend
'Loss, love, revenge, buried secrets and greed add up to make Sister Dear an electrifying read. If you think you know where this story is headed, watch out. Hannah Mary McKinnon has a few tricks up her sleeve. A must read!'
Mary Kubica, New York Times bestselling author of The Good Girl and The Other Mrs
'A grieving daughter, a jealous sister - nothing is as it seems in Hannah Mary McKinnon's latest slow-burn suspense, Sister Dear. This one creeps up the back of your neck then explodes into an ending that I guarantee you won't soon forget. Smart, addictive, and genuinely surprising'
Kimberly Belle, bestselling author of The Marriage Lie and Dear Wife
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Eleanor Hardwicke, the 29-year-old narrator of this dreadful and depressing psychological thriller from McKinnon (Her Secret Son), grew up in Portland, Maine, with an emotionally abusive mother, a sister who hated her, a face and body she disliked, and a general aversion to people. Her one good relationship has been with her father, who shortly before his death reveals a secret he isn't her real father. Crushed that her father and only friend is gone, Eleanor looks up her biological father, Stan Gallinger. Stan rejects her and warns her not to get near his wife or daughter, Victoria, who's her two months' younger half-sister. Desperate to make a meaningful human connection, Eleanor worms herself into Victoria's life without revealing her true identity and, thinking they are best friends, gets pulled into Victoria's dark and vicious world with disastrous results. Despite Eleanor's emotional baggage and pitiful history, few will care about her fate. No one wins in this story, especially the reader.