Where They Found Her
A riveting domestic thriller of motherhood, marriage, class distinctions and betrayal
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- 75,00 kr
Publisher Description
'A rollercoaster of a novel … McCreight has once again proven herself to be an insightful writer capable of taking us on a hell of a ride' Jodi Picoult
'Completely riveting' Emma Healey, Costa Award winning author of Elizabeth is Missing
The very worst crimes are those we commit against the ones we love.
Motherhood hasn't come at all easy for Molly Anderson. But she's finally enjoying life as mother to five-year-old Ella and as Arts reporter for the small but respectable Ridgedale Reader. That is, until a body is found in the woods adjacent to Ridgedale University's ivy-covered campus. This is a discovery that threatens to unearth secrets long buried by the town's most powerful residents, and brings Molly to two women who are far more deeply connected than they have ever realised.
Where They Found Her is a riveting domestic thriller which offers a searing portrait of motherhood, marriage, class distinctions and the damage wrought by betrayal.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Edgar-finalist McCreight (Reconstructing Amelia) smoothly juggles multiple voices in her strong second novel. Four of them belong to freelance journalist Molly Sanderson: Molly's own contemporary voice, her recorded psychiatric sessions, her therapy-era journal, and her published articles for the local paper in Ridgedale, N.J., a Princeton-like community where she lives with her professor husband, Justin, and their five-year-old daughter, Ella. Molly is assigned the story of a newborn discovered dead in a creek on university property a dicey subject given Molly's loss of her own baby two years earlier and her subsequent depression. Other perspectives include that of Sandy, a bright high school dropout; Sandy's reckless mother, Jenna, who abruptly vanishes; and Barbara, the "perfect mom" of a kindergarten classmate of Ella's, Cole, who starts exhibiting troubling behavior. Molly's reporting uncovers a slew of dark secrets, some too close to home. While McCreight's plot contains some far-fetched coincidences, her deft writing makes for a thoroughly riveting tale.