A Mother's Lie
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- $9.99
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- $9.99
Publisher Description
A compulsive family drama about a mother's desperate search to reclaim her daughter from the horrors of her own past, perfect for fans of Lisa Jewell's Then She Was Gone.
Beth Fraser finally has her life together. She's built a successful career in the tech sector, has a bright fifteen-year-old daughter, and she's completely erased all evidence of her troubled past. At least that's what she thought.
Dana Fraser always wondered why she's the only kid with two backup phones, emergency drills, and a non-negotiable check-in time every single day. When a stranger approaches her on the street claiming to be her grandmother, Dana starts to question what else her mother has been hiding.
Soon Beth's worst nightmare is coming true: Dana is in grave danger, and unless Beth is willing to pull one last con job for her parents, she may never see her daughter again.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
A dysfunctional family drama plays out in this half-baked thriller from Zettel (The Other Sister). Single mother Beth Fraser, a vice president at a successful Chicago tech company, requires her spunky 15-year-old daughter, Dana, to send check-in texts every day at 4:30. One day after school, a woman approaches Dana and claims to be the grandmother she never met, and Beth's fears are confirmed. Beth's dangerous, con-artist parents, Todd and Jeannie Bowen, are in town and clearly want something from her. When Todd later meets with Beth and reveals that Jeannie has cancer, Dana softens from her initially suspicious attitude toward Jeannie but is subsequently exposed to some horrifying truths about her mother's past. Beth will do anything to save her daughter from Todd and Jeannie, even if it involves pulling a con job on the violent Todd. Unfortunately, readers will struggle to understand the true intentions of the characters and won't be able to root for any one of them. The action builds to a fairly gripping conclusion with a few loose ends, though excessive repeated dialogue ("I'm so sorry") distracts. Zettel, best known for her SF, has done better.