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The Second Suspect

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Gabriel and Ingrid Santerre are a wealthy, highly connected couple with a savage In the privacy of a posh New York City hotel suite, they like to subject teenage prostitutes to extremely rough sex. This time, though, they've gone too far, and their victim is dead. As Gabriel goes out to buy a golf bag to hide the body in, Ingrid, strangely passive and long brutalized by her husband, suddenly feels remorse and calls the police. The two are swiftly taken into custody and separated; Gabriel calls in his high-powered lawyer and calmly schemes to frame his wife.

But NYPD detective Caroline Reese won't let him get away with it. Despite Gabriel's connections--reaching right into the district attorney's office--and a warning from her lieutenant that she's proceeding at her own risk, Reese finds the one woman who can lead her to the truth. Reese's quest is blocked not only by Gabriel's pull, but by a violent episode in her own past--one that has left her with a blind spot that keeps her from seeing the whole picture about Gabriel and his wife.

Bringing an exciting new voice to the noir thriller, Heather Lewis coolly and masterfully builds the tension until the novel's shattering--and deeply satisfying--payoff.

272 pages, Hardcover

First published January 1, 1998

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About the author

Heather Lewis

3 books85 followers
Librarian note:
There is more than one author in the GoodReads database with this name


Heather Lewis was born in Bedford, New York and attended Sarah Lawrence College. She is the author of three published novels. The first, House Rules (1994), details the experiences of a fifteen year old girl working as a show rider of horses-an experience the author herself had in her teenage years. Lewis's second novel, The Second Suspect (1998), follows the struggles of a female police investigator trying to prove the guilt of a powerful and influential businessman responsible for the rape and murder of several young women. The third, posthumously published novel, Notice (2004), describes the experiences of a young prostitute, Nina and her involvement with a sadist and his wife. Her works explore aspects of American culture, such as the connections between power, drugs, sex, violence, love and justice. Through these themes, Heather Lewis draws the reader into questioning the nature of love and relationships, the character of human nature or motivation and, most challengingly, the boundary between pleasure and pain. Significantly, the novels present strong, yet vulnerable female characters offering an alternative to more typical American narrative constructions driven by male protagonists within male-dominated scenes.

Heather Lewis taught at the Writer's Voice and contributed to various anthologies of literature including Best Lesbian Erotica (1996, 1997), Once Upon a Time: Erotic Fairy Tales for Women (1996), and A Woman Like That: Lesbian and Bisexual Writers Tell Their Coming Out Stories (1999). The collection also includes work by Allan Gurganus, Dale Peck, Mike Corrigan, Margaret Au, as well as shorter pieces by Sarah Schulman, Meg Daly, and others. Heather Lewis returned to New York in the fall of 2001, after a year in Arizona. She ended her life in May of 2002, in New York.

Sources:
Memorial service program: St. Mark's Church, New York, NY, June 12, 2002.
"Pain and Perfection" (Anonymous). The Advocate; Los Angeles, June 11, 2002.

From: The Fales Library and Special Collections

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5 stars
14 (13%)
4 stars
32 (31%)
3 stars
32 (31%)
2 stars
20 (19%)
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5 (4%)
Displaying 1 - 15 of 15 reviews
Profile Image for Oliver Clarke.
Author 99 books2,045 followers
April 5, 2023
Fascinating as a retellling of 'Notice', and deeply moving given what happened to Lewis.
The mystery isn't as well done as it might have been, but this still works as a standalone book.
Profile Image for Bill Kupersmith.
Author 1 book245 followers
August 18, 2016
Full review to be combined with Heather Lewis's The Notice, as these stories are clearly related. As a detective story, this book is fairly routine, but as a depiction of stone-cold courage that gazes into the abyss without even blinking, it is clearly the work of the author of House Rules.
Profile Image for Chris.
Author 2 books24 followers
August 18, 2020
Very dark crime drama. I am surprised how much I was into this even though almost all of the action is told in flashbacks. Usually, I hate that sort of book. However, I also had already read Lewis's Notice, which in a lot of ways plays as a first hand version of this same story from the teen prostitutes point of view, and without the police angle, so I may have felt a bit more on the inside.
Some of the writing is a little clunky (which is certainly not true of Notice), but it didn't detract from sustaining my interest.
772 reviews12 followers
December 21, 2021
Generally, I don't finish a book I don't like so it never appears here. This one is an exception. I didn't really like it but I'm not sure it's not worth reading. It's one of the darkest mysteries I've ever read. Gabriel and Ingrid Santerre are a couple with money and power and they kill young prostitutes. Caroline Reece, NYPD detective, wants to prove this and she wants it badly. While you read the book, you can literally see a black and white movie of it in your head complete with ominous sound track. Interesting.
Profile Image for Lars Meijer.
427 reviews49 followers
January 17, 2025
The Second Suspect (of De tweede verdachte in de Nederlandse vertaling) kent een interessante voorgeschiedenis. Oorspronkelijk was het plan van Lewis om met Notice , die ik recentelijk las en waanzinnig vond, te debuteren, maar deze werd door achttien uitgeverijen geweigerd, vanwege de inhoud. Zodoende stelde haar literaire agent voor om het boek te herschrijven naar een thriller voor een 'groter publiek', en dat werd De tweede verdachte.

Met deze kennis is het waardevol om beide boeken naast elkaar te lezen, aangezien dit boek zich een jaar of tien ná Notice afspeelt. De horror blijkt nog niet voorbij te zijn. Bij vlagen merk je dat het thrillergenre Lewis niet helemaal ligt, maar alsnog weet ze een scherpe en wederom, bij vlagen ook, angstaanjagende roman te schrijven.
83 reviews
December 6, 2025
I wouldn't just recommend this to anyone, but for those who can handle it, it is one you will not forget. Read "Notice" first!!!!!

I once read someone say that Heather Lewis has a knack at capturing the dark side of humanity. This is seen in all three of her works, "House Rules", "Notice", and "Second Suspect".

There were a few things I felt happened differently than previously written in "Notice" that is revisited in "Second Suspect." Honestly, sometimes Heather Lewis's writing can be confusing in the prose and voice she writes in. I would have to reread and cross-reference.

Very good writer. Very cringy matter. This is her least darkest book of the three, I feel.

"House Rules" is not associated with the same characters or timeline.
Profile Image for Amie Ward.
56 reviews1 follower
November 20, 2021
It's interesting reading a book written in a mindset of 2 decades ago. The wife clearly has some PTSD and mental health issues, but these are just played off as being crazy or not worth mentioning, which is a reflection of the misunderstanding of the time. The book itself is dark in concept but just does not engage the reader fully, being your typical detective drama. I was also left confused by the ending.
Profile Image for Emmi.
800 reviews9 followers
July 7, 2020
I give this 3.5 stars.

I read another book by this author which was very disturbing and yet very compelling, which is why I wanted to read this. It has some of the same elements but didn't have the same pull.
57 reviews
May 5, 2021
Superb writing - grim and grubby and squalid - tension written delightfully
1,248 reviews6 followers
July 9, 2015
I had to chose a book for a challenge that I'm working on that had received bad reviews, so I searched a few places to find some ideas and this book mentioned in an review from and Ivy League school. I enjoyed the book though. I very often figure out who the culprit is in crime stories, but this one kept me on my toes.
Profile Image for Jenn..
15 reviews3 followers
May 13, 2009
Compared to 'House rules' and 'Notice' this book was very disappointing. I actually got bored reading it. Would never had thought that, as I loved Heather's other books (though they were difficult to read because of the subject matter). Too bad there won't be any more...

Profile Image for Stacey.
1 review
December 5, 2013
This was a fast read, however, the story did not flow as well as I would have liked. Overall a good book. I was just frustrated at times trying to follow the present/past conversations.
Profile Image for Gerry Durisin.
2,281 reviews1 follower
April 9, 2016
Who is really responsible for the murder of a young prostitute? Husband and wife are both suspects, and while it seems as if he is framing her, the wife’s innocence is questionable too.
Displaying 1 - 15 of 15 reviews

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