This book was marked as “suspense” by the library and several other places have also insinuated that this is a suspenseful story. I don’t know why.
The book starts out shortly after Leslie has a miscarriage. A mishap with anesthesia causes her memory to be poor. She discovers an article about a little girl that was kidnapped 25 years ago and she’s convinced it is her.
She finds the family and tries to make herself a part of their lives.
Okay, the storyline was interesting, but I’m not sure why some elements were thrown in. For instance, her miscarriage is fairly important, but her sudden memory problems were not at all relevant. At no point in time did I believe she even remotely had a memory problem and the fact was just thrown out at me time and time again only until it was no longer a convenient excuse for the author to explain Leslie’s weirdness.
And suspense? Don’t get me started. I figured out the ending after Part One. The plot was entirely too predictable and the characters completely lacked emotion or conviction.
I wouldn’t classify this as a bad book, but there are too many flaws in it for me to say it was good.