Women Like Us
-
- 10,99 €
Beschreibung des Verlags
Katia Lief’s Women Like Us is a sharply-rendered literary thriller that examines the complexities and responsibilities of female friendship—what brings women together, and what drives them apart.
Joni Ackerman was tired of being invisible.
It’s been five years since Joni Ackerman tipped the antifreeze into her husband’s cocktail. Five years since he was found dead on the stairs. Five years since she got away with murder. At first, Joni feared the consequences of her transgression, but she’s learned to embrace the power of recklessness in a way she would have hated to see in anyone else. It was that recklessness, after all, that took her to this rewarding new life.
Joni now runs Sunny Day Productions alongside her daughter, Chris, and her best friend, Val. All is well in life and work until, one day, their balance is rocked when an unexpected, and unwelcome, visitor appears.
When Joni’s brother, Marc, resurfaces after a twenty-year estrangement, Joni braces for the sibling she knew—a cruel, vindictive conman who deftly switched between personas. But this Marc on her doorstep is different. He’s older, softer. And he seems to have overcome the self-inflicted traumas of his past.
But Val isn’t fooled. She knows exactly what sort of man Marc is, and she warns Joni to keep her guard up. When Mark inevitably betrays Joni’s trust, Joni is forced to look inward. As dark thoughts, and darker compulsions, take form, Joni can’t help but wonder: ‘Is psychopathy a family trait?’
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Lief's bracing sequel to Invisible Woman further develops its predecessor's themes of inherited trauma and loyalty between women. Five years after filmmaker Joni Ackerman got away with the murder of her abusive husband, her bullying con man brother, Marc, appears on her doorstep after a 20-year absence. Though Marc's apparent reformation persuades Joni to leave him at her Malibu home to dog sit while she launches a project in New York, her colleague and best friend, Val, is unconvinced. When a chance encounter between Val and another woman reveals Marc is still swindling, Joni must try to stop her brother from finding new victims and untangle just how similar their shared blood has made them. Lief sometimes makes the emotional subtext of Joni's struggles too explicit, but she atones for it by infusing Joni's search for Marc and his accomplices with supremely satisfying tension. This is equal parts empowering and entertaining.