Karin Schaeffer's husband is missing presumed dead.
The police are convinced that Mac took his own life after the brutal murder of his parents in what looks like a robbery gone bad...Karin is determined to do all she can to find her husband...alive or dead.
Only she's about to discover how little she knows about the man she married.
But someone else is watching the Schaeffer family. Watching, waiting and biding their time before they reveal the dark secrets of Mac's past - and exact a terrifying revenge.
The first thing I ever wrote that received any notice was a one page story for my third grade English teacher. I don't recall what the assignment was, but I somehow found myself writing about a woman at a dinner party who suddenly realizes her teeth are invisible. She sits there, wedged between two chattering guests, wondering how she will eat, how she will talk, and generally how she will get out of the situation without having to open her mouth and reveal her dilemma. My teacher showed the story to my parents with a note to this effect: Katia could be a writer.
What if her note had instead encouraged me to be a dentist?
But it didn't. And so here I am.
So far I've published two literary novels (as Katia Spiegelman, the name I was born with), and seven suspense novels--five as Kate Pepper (a pseudonym) and two as Katia Lief (the name I live by). And to complicated things even more, I'm adding a new pen name to my arsenal-Karen Ellis-with my new novel A MAP OF THE DARK, coming January 2, 2018.
I have loved writing every one of my novels, and hope you will enjoy reading them.
This was a hell of a book and this author is a hell of a writer! She's becoming my new fave. She writes a lot like Wendy Corsi Staub and I so enjoy that! Highly recommend this series... start with the first book as this was the second and I'm starting the third right now :)
It is amazing how some books can be boring and enjoyable at the same time.
The main problem with this book is that there was no place for boredom, speculation, or thoughtful analysis, mind you, there were so many plot twists that I wished the stream of them would stop. Katia Lief seemed to prefer being in control, requiring that the reader flips through the pages absent-mindedly, with as little effort as possible. The element of surprise was indeed nice, but there was too much of it, so much that it seemed as though the author had too many brilliant ideas and she couldn't wait to put them into motion and see how they unfold.
Somehow I enjoyed this one both more and at the same time less than I did the first in the series. It’s an odd way to feel about a book, and yet such is the case.
In the end the book was just as gripping as the first, yet I had been hoping for more action. When there was action it was great, but as with the first I felt as though the story stopped and started more than was necessary. It was as though our main character couldn’t quite convince herself to move forward, waiting for things to happen and being more passive than I would have liked.
As with the first book, however, the crime aspect of the book was thrilling. It was interesting to see the way things played out, the way everything was connected, filled with twists and turns. The criminal aspects of these books are certainly high up on my list of enjoyed crime stories yet the other aspects of the books seem to let me down – hence my love-hate relationship with them. As my four stars show I love them more than I hate them but I still find myself wanting something more from them. Whether it is due to the fact that I’m more accustomed to the bulky crime books I cannot say, but I feel as though these pass too quickly.
Still, despite that, I am in love with the developing story and want to see where everything goes.
Difficult one to rate. Once I actually picked this up and started reading it, it was hard to put down. But it felt very disjointed. Within the end chapters multiple good chances to end it. Plenty of good stopping places. But the author has continued to write adding additional and unnecessary last minute twists and turns. Made it a little far fetched in the end. I did like the characters and it was easy enough to follow. I would try other books by this author.
Plot was too convoluted. Husband's parents are killed. Husband's brother suspected. Husband goes missing and is presumed to have committed suicide when they find his car submerged in the Sound.
Karin on trip to Miami thinks she sees husband at the airport. Hires PI who snaps photo or him with another woman. Woman turns out to head a drug cartel in Mexico. Knew Mac when she met him during his spring break trip to Mexico.
She killed parents as revenge for him leaving her and stealing her money for ticket back to States. She had been pregnant when he left.
But not enough. Then DEA agents are found to be working in league with Ana's rival, one if which works for Karin's mom.
Too much melodrama.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Lief does it again. Mac MacLeary leaves the Maplewood police department and takes an executive position at a security company. Karen Schaeffer is Mac’s old partner and new wife and they live in New York City with their son Ben. One night, Mac gets the phone call every son fears with an added surprise—his parents, Hugh and Aileen—were found in their home in Bronxville just outside the city dead; murdered. Police say it was a botched home invasion…a blood bath.
After the funeral Mac and Karin’s lives change forever. One morning on his way to work, Mac disappears. Things quickly go from bad to worse when Karin befriends a woman named Jasmine who works with her mother. Jasmine decides she wants to spend her birthday in Miami under a palm tree drinking Blue Devils. Karin doesn’t want her to spend her birthday alone and surprises her by joining her there.
While waiting for Jasmine’s plane to land, Karin can’t believe her eyes…if she hadn’t known better, she would swear her husband Mac was walking across the Miami Airport. He doesn’t respond to her yelling his name so she immediately wonders if she is hallucinating or if he is indeed alive.
After hiring a P.I., she gets a photograph of him with another woman and immediately thinks the worst. Before long, she is thrown waist deep into a drug cartel, a jealous ex, an illegitimate son and countless, hired, drugged-up lackey’s do to the bidding of a bitter woman who wants nothing more than to see Mac and everything he covets, destroyed.
There’s a lot that goes on in this story and every twist and turn brings you closer to the brink of madness and the real story behind the murders of the MacLeary’s and Mac’s “death”. An awesome read, but I expect nothing less of Lief.
Reviewed by Terri Ann Armstrong, author of “Morning Menace” and Executive Editor for Suspense Magazine
beginning was good, quite the thrill yes. middle was eh not bad not going to sleep looking forward to waking up and reading either. end I skimmed so that's that. karin or whatever her name is: chiiiiilll sister. mac or whatever his name is: stop chilling so much, you're getting yourself in life-threatening situations every 2-3 working days, it's abnormal.
Is this book based on real life events or what? I found it boring and confusing. Karin was just so annoying. A busy body who can't keep her mouth shut. I won't be hurrying to get her next book that's for sure.
Unfortunately, for this whole action-packed novel, the thing I remember most is the main character's xenophobic comment toward the undercover agent (who Karin did not know was an agent at the time, but just a friend of her mother's). I don't think this is the author's point of view; I think this is a flaw of the character and she is put in her place (ironically, her name is Karin, but this was before we all knew about "Karens".) This is, thankfully, not something that keeps recurring, and this Karin seems to have learned her lesson. So we can move on.
It's been a few months since I finished the book, and I don't remember that much about the specifics, so I'll keep it brief: well-paced, well-plotted, a nice twist or two that surprised me, one I guessed and was happy to have done. Readers are kept in a sense of uncertainty that matches well with the protagonist; and just when you think everything is solved and better - BAM! Another twist to keep it going.
I would recommend this with a reservation or warning; but Karin seems to have learned her lesson. Sort of. That character is not good at learning lessons.
The author waste no time or pages getting to the heart of the matter. Karin’s husband of two years, Mac, learns from Karin that some murdered his parents in what looks to be a home invasion. The cops think Mac’s constantly drunken brother, Danny, killed them, but Mac and his older sister believe otherwise. When Karin shows up to celebrate their second anniversary, Mac never appears. He’s gone missing, and it’s up to Karin to ferret out his secrets and enter the world where the darkness sometimes takes him.
When someone finds a car Mac rented submerged in water, everyone assumes he has committed suicide. Karin denies that he’s dead, but he never reappears. That changes when Karin sees him in an airport in Miami. She’s sure she’s hallucinating since he doesn’t respond to her. But she doesn’t give up, and she endangers her life because of her tenacity.
This isn’t a top-flight series, but it’s ok. I will at least read the third book perhaps near the end of this year or early next.
This is a difficult book to rate because it wasn't at all what I was expecting and I spent most of it wanting it to end but I also couldn't put it down and read the whole thing in a day.
I was just expecting it to be a run of the mill detective story, but it was absolutely bonkers. Imagine a proper Hollywood drug cartel/thriller/ revenge /over dramatised story with guns and deaths and drama drama drama. It was insane. Every time I rolled my eyes in disbelief it went another step further.
But I could not stop reading it. And now I understand why there are about 39 Fast and Furious Films.
Got this given to me on a whim by a friend leaving the country, she never read it so I decided to. Honestly a really good read! I don't think this is the first book in the series so I was mildly confused at points, but the author is amazing at describing every scene in such perfect detail, so much so that I started to piece together parts I'd missed in the first book naturally. The story is really engaging to follow. Admittedly there were some parts near the end that felt a bit out of nowhere, but not nearly enough to take me out of the story. A good book, even as a clueless new reader!
This book was ridiculous. The twists and turns made it a quick read, but everything was so unbelievable. I also got annoyed at how much the main character talked about her kid and how having a child made her a good person. Seriously one line was, "before Karin had a child, she ignored homeless people, but now she realizes they were all born to someone and gives them five dollars." WTF?! Childless people can have empathy for others too you know.
Het is allemaal wat veel, te veel twists en de geloofwaardigheid is een beetje zoek. Leest wel supersnel. Ik vond dit deel wel minder indrukwekkend dan het eerste boek. Ik hoop dat het volgende boek iets minder "over the top" is. Less is more...
I like this series okay, but I have to believe a few unbelievable things to read them. A lot of coincidences that set big things in motion, sometimes a little hard to believe. Decent series so far. I’m going to give it one more book and see if I want to continue the series.
Katia Lief’s first book, the thrilling “You Are Next,” was published in the US in October of 2010; this novel, a sequel, was published there under the title “Next Time You See Me” one short month later. Inasmuch as it picks up four years after the end of the first book, everything to follow must be considered a potential spoiler, hence:
SPOILER ALERT
Karin Schaeffer is still living in Brooklyn, New York, but now she is about to celebrate her second wedding anniversary. Five months pregnant, she had married Mac, after the latter quit the Maplewood, New Jersey police force [as had Karin herself a few years back], moved to Brooklyn where he married Karin and they both started a new life after [barely] surviving the events described in the first book
Karin had been a soldier, a cop and a detective; now a mother and currently taking courses in forensic psychology at John Jay College of Criminal Justice; Mac [nee Seamus MacLeary], a former cop for more than twenty years, has just been promoted to senior vice-president of Forensic Security at the exclusive firm of Quest Security after a scandal involving allegedly altered forensic testimony in a high-profile legal case had resulted in his predecessor in the job being summarily fired. Also present is Billy Staples, the cop who worked with them on the earlier case, now Mac’s best friend and still working in Brooklyn’s 84th Precinct.
As the tale opens, Mac’s parents have been found dead in their home, apparently the victims of a botched home invasion. But a few days later, shortly after the funeral, the police suspect Mac’s brother, Danny, who has a history of alcoholism and rootlessness, frequently changing jobs and girlfriends, based on DNA evidence found in the house. In a state of exhaustion, when Mac insists on going to work but trying to exude enthusiasm on the morning of their anniversary celebration dinner, he promises Karin, with a kiss and a smile, “next time you see me, I’ll be . . . “ when she cuts off his apology with another kiss. Then he disappears.
Two weeks later, with no word from Mac, they are notified that the car that he had apparently rented has been found in Long Island Sound, with no trace of a body. Months go by, with no word from or trace of Mac. Karin is convinced that his disappearance has something to do with his new job, rather than his parents’ murder and Danny’s possible involvement. She is convinced that Mac is still alive, focusing on the fact that no body has been found. She hires a private detective, and discovers things about Mac’s past she never knew of or suspected. As her mother tells her, “we may think we know someone, but there are always surprises,” and as Karin herself thinks, “if you think life is going to turn out the way you plan it, you’re a fool.”
The book is as suspenseful and surprising as was the earlier book, and it too is highly recommended. .
Just when she thought she'd put her horrific past behind her, Karin Schaeffer is once again thrust on to the scene of a grisly murder that puts the family she just created in jeopardy. In this sequel to You Are Next, Karin appears to have everything, a new husband and baby and college career that she loves. The nightmares from the serial killer that were haunting her are now gone and her life seems perfect. But as the day of her wedding anniversary to Mac approaches, her perfect life starts to turn sour. Mac's parents are killed in a bloody massacre where his brother is the prime suspect. Mac's grief starts to eat at him as he tries to find the truth behind the murders and as Karin waits for him at their anniversary dinner, Mac vanishes without a word. Before long his car is found in the river with only his shoe found wedged under the gas pedal. As Karin continues to investigate the mystery of Mac's disappearance she realizes there's a lot about him she didn't know. She learns of his troubles at work and finds a purchase for an expensive jewelry piece that she never knew about and never saw. Contrary to what others say though she doesn't believe he's dead, and on a trip to Miami with a bubbly new friend she sees someone that looks just like her husband. With information from a private investigator guiding her, she returns to Miami which leads to a series of events that end with a gun pointing at her head. Is the man she saw really her husband and if so, what in his past has led Karin to again fear for her life and that of her son?
This is a book full of twists and turns that keeps the pace moving along quickly. Just when things appear to go well for Karin something comes along to put her in danger again. But Karin is no coward and will always sacrifice herself for those she loves. She'll always come out fighting instead of hiding in the corner. This keeps the reader rooting for her and excited to see what comes next. Helping to keep the plot exciting are a few characters from the previous book, most notably Mac. He's gone from work partner to personal partner in this book and more sides to his personality have emerged. He's not exactly the perfect man he appeared to us before, he has a dark past that comes back to harm his family. He tells lies and Karin at times questions the view she had of their marriage. It will take a lot of work to try to repair their marriage. Mac's not the only one who's not as he appears though. There are numerous characters who appear to be heroes only to change later on in the story. This keeps the reader in a constant state of distrust and fully immersed in the mystery. For lovers of suspense, this is a book that you will love. It will keep your heart pounding and questioning everything and everyone until the very last page.
Katia Lief’s first book, the thrilling “You Are Next,” was published in October of 2010; this novel, a sequel, was published under the title one short month later. Inasmuch as it picks up four years after the end of the first book, everything to follow must be considered a potential spoiler, hence:
SPOILER ALERT
Karin Schaeffer is still living in Brooklyn, New York, but now she is about to celebrate her second wedding anniversary. Five months pregnant, she had married Mac, after the latter quit the Maplewood, New Jersey police force [as had Karin herself a few years back], moved to Brooklyn where he married Karin and they both started a new life after [barely] surviving the events described in the first book
Karin had been a soldier, a cop and a detective; now a mother and currently taking courses in forensic psychology at John Jay College of Criminal Justice; Mac [nee Seamus MacLeary], a former cop for more than twenty years, has just been promoted to senior vice-president of Forensic Security at the exclusive firm of Quest Security after a scandal involving allegedly altered forensic testimony in a high-profile legal case had resulted in his predecessor in the job being summarily fired. Also present is Billy Staples, the cop who worked with them on the earlier case, now Mac’s best friend and still working in Brooklyn’s 84th Precinct.
As the tale opens, Mac’s parents have been found dead in their home, apparently the victims of a botched home invasion. But a few days later, shortly after the funeral, the police suspect Mac’s brother, Danny, who has a history of alcoholism and rootlessness, frequently changing jobs and girlfriends, based on DNA evidence found in the house. In a state of exhaustion, when Mac insists on going to work but trying to exude enthusiasm on the morning of their anniversary celebration dinner, he promises Karin, with a kiss and a smile, “next time you see me, I’ll be . . . “ when she cuts off his apology with another kiss. Then he disappears.
Two weeks later, with no word from Mac, they are notified that the car that he had apparently rented has been found in Long Island Sound, with no trace of a body. Months go by, with no word from or trace of Mac. Karin is convinced that his disappearance has something to do with his new job, rather than his parents’ murder and Danny’s possible involvement. She is convinced that Mac is still alive, focusing on the fact that no body has been found. She hires a private detective, and discovers things about Mac’s past she never knew of or suspected. As her mother tells her, “we may think we know someone, but there are always surprises,” and as Karin herself thinks, “if you think life is going to turn out the way you plan it, you’re a fool.”
The book is as suspenseful and surprising as was the earlier book, and it too is highly recommended. .