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344 pages, Paperback
First published March 1, 2018
I remember loving Till the Dust Settles. You can find my review here. The way the author had put such a horrific day in our history all around the center of her story and created characters strong enough to make you believe and feel.
A new life for our main character. I was so happy to meet with Penny again. It was as though I was meeting an old friend after so long. Ten years? Despite the changes in name and life in general, Penny hasn’t lost her old self, it clings to her despite everyone’s efforts to create a new woman. The wife and mother, the happy and totally normal person who has been under police protection since 2001. The author’s choice to portray her main character filled with fear, struggling, doing her best, looking over her shoulder, everything was spot-on and I was relieved Penny’s new name hadn’t completely erased her old self. Because no matter what had happened in the aftermath of September 11th, I had grown to like her and I was hoping to spend more time with her.
I was not disappointed! Busy Penny, scared as she may be, trusting a stranger so easily was very strange, especially when it came to her kids, but for having felt this sort of connection to someone I did not know, I glossed over it. There was the perfect dose to make me believe in what was happening. And most of all, it brought another very interesting character to the story!
Sophie. What to say about her? Her youth made me smile, her way with kids was impressive, don’t ever leave me with children alone, please. It was a pleasure to pick up some French here and there as I discovered Carcassonne with the little family + 1! I knew something was off and I just couldn’t wait for the chase to start!
I love it when protagonists have more than one face, one motive, one train of thoughts. Seth, lovely husband, reacting like a real human, not a weird robot going from the perfect husband to an absolute twat in two pages. Penny, worried but happy, holding on to secrets and fears, trying to live with them. Kids being kids. And bad people being more than just bad people.
Child abduction is tricky to write about. You don’t want to go too far, you want to take your reader a certain way but if the writing doesn’t deliver, it fails. Well, I Know Where You Live did NOT fail! My heart cried with parents looking for their cutie Ethan while my brain was running every possibility to find out who was the culprit! There weren’t real twists to the story, and this is a point that amazes me. The read is addictive without the need of pure tension at all time created by OMG cliffhanger chapters. The pages are somehow filled with electricity and you just have to wait for the big explosion.
Yes, this book is different from the first one. You can’t compare, you can only enjoy the fact the author brilliantly managed to create another case of “intense, gut-wrenching, powerful and compelling thriller served by genuine, terrific, and most of all “human” characters.” (Yep, quoting myself here :p)