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256 pages, Paperback
First published August 1, 2017


What if you wrote of someone writing of you? In the end, which of you would be real?
After She Wrote Him is rather interesting book.
I liked its execution and the originality of the concept more than I liked its content, but I also recognize the fact that it was very different and probably quite unique in its genre.
The story is engaging and it requires all the reader's attention. It also gives you the chance to take a peak inside the fascinating world of book writing and I really liked seeing both Madeline and Edward's stories unravel before my eyes thanks to the other's narration.
One thing that kind of boggled me was how over the top the dialogues felt. I don't know if it was the author's purpose to accentuate the fact that this is a book inside a book inside a book (Lisa Simpson's voice: he's like a riddle wrapped in an enigma wrapped in a vest), but I wasn't a fan of it because it made the already absurd situation a little bit too fake.
Overall, I quite enjoyed this book.
The ending didn't satisfy me and it was kind of predictable, but I highly appreciated the author's effort of trying to give the thriller scene something new to talk and read about.
Oh, I also really really really loved the previous title better, although I can tell Crossing The Lines sounds more like a romance book title and not one about murders and mysteries.
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"It's an exploration of an author's relationship with her protagonist, an examination of the tenuous line between belief and reality, imagination and self, and what happens when that line is crossed." (p.33)So author Edward McGinnity explains the concept of his new novel to his friend, artist Willow Merriwether, but it could just as well be a description of Sulari Gentill's standalone mystery-thriller Crossing the Lines.
"Not only would he know her, she would come to know him. And therein would be the danger and the essence of the story." (p.10)It's a fascinating plot premise, and keeps the reader guessing as to who is the real writer and who is the imaginary character, as the chapters unfold alternately from the perspectives of Ned and Madeleine. At first it's light and entrancing, as we get to know the cast of characters in both literary worlds, however, soon darker themes begin to emerge. Ned is haunted by the legacy of an accident in his past, while there are signs that Madeleine's world is crumbling around her.