He calls himself Accuser... and he knows your darkest secrets.
When Sara Thompson took the man's order, she had no idea he would take the entire diner hostage moments later. And she had no idea he would know her deepest, dirtiest sin. Calling himself Accuser, the man offers his victims a chance at freedom - but at a price. The Accuser's demand seems All his captives have to do is reveal their blackest sins and they will walk free. But as one by one the hostages testify, the game gets darker, and as Sara and the others are forced to face the shame of their pasts, the Accuser proves he knows more about his hostages than any of them can fathom.
In his first foray into writing for adults, Josh Clark proves he is more than up to the challenge, and delivers a spine-tingling debut thriller that demands to be experienced.
Josh Clark is a high school English teacher at Edgerton High School in Edgerton, Ohio. When not in the classroom, Josh likes to read, play guitar and go on neighborhood runs with his wife, Cindy. A graduate of Huntington University where he found his love for writing, Josh and his wife also spent a year teaching in Wabash, Indiana before settling in Archbold, Ohio. He has currently finished writing another novel for young adults and is hard at work on a few writing projects for adult readers.
This book is a solid read. It's fast paced and easy to get lost in. It's a story of redemption, and clearly an allegory to Christ's sacrifice. It's a solid book, and I'd recommend it to anybody. I have a few theological quandaries, so that's why I can't give it 5 stars. The dream sequence at the end could have been left out, because the diner scene was ended so perfectly, it would have left it at the perfect place.
I really would like to see a followup to this book.