Thirty years after two young sisters disappeared from Baltimore, a spaced-out woman is arrested near the city for having left the scene of an accident, and claims to be Heather Bethany, the younger of the pair; she tells of having been kidnapped by a cop, who murdered her elder sibling, Sunny, and kept Heather -- even though to start with she was just twelve -- as a sex slave before, a few years later, releasing her into the world with $5000 and a promise that they'll both keep quiet about this. In the intervening period Heather's parents split up and then her dad died; her only blood relative (oh yes?) is her mother, Miriam, now at age 68 living a sort of postponed hippie lifestyle in a small Mexican town. Of similar age is the detective, now retired, who got nowhere with the case of the Bethany sisters but could never shut it out of his mind; also investigating are a high-fee shyster, a studly young cop, and a dumpy divorced social worker.
The cover is plastered with rave reviews telling me this is a unique feat of the imagination and that Lippman delves psychologically deeper than any other thriller writer. Well, yes. Although this was entertainingly enough written, I could never escape the feeling that I'd read lots like it before; I guessed the mainspring of the plot's denouement fairly early on, which didn't help. I was reminded throughout of UK writers like Ruth Rendell and Val McDermid, which sort of put paid to the "psychologically deeper" claim (which is not to say that I wouldn't have been impressed by the power of the book's psychological undertow, as it were, had the claim not been there; just that publishers should be careful what their cover quotes spark off in readers' minds). The book also reminded me of the novels of Donna Tartt, in particular The Little Friend (2002); I'm sure other readers will find plenty of other comparisons.
The fact that the cover seemed very Picnic on Hanging Rock (the movie rather than the novel) didn't help.
Was it a good tale, well told? Certainly it was: I was gripped. Will I look out for other Lippman novels? I should reckon so.