Whenever I want a good book that is intelligently written and a tad scary, I often resort to Dean Kootnz. He writes books that can suck me in and make me into a relentless reader as I scurry for the end of his stories. In fact, I believe him to be a much better author than who I would guess is his main rival. (His initials being SK). His new book The Other Emily is no exception and as the story moves forward, we find a writer, David Thorne still bereft and suffering from the loss of Emily, a woman he loved ten years ago.
Emily disappeared those many years ago, and David has been left with a hole in his heart and missing a part of his soul. One night, after visiting the serial killer, Ronny Lee Jessup, who supposedly murdered Emily and so many others, he sits at a bar and nurses a drink. Megan Sutton is there and David finds himself drawn to this beautiful woman who so reminds him of who he lost, his Emily. David becomes more entrenched in Megan, a mysterious woman who as time passes becomes more and more like Emily. How could this be? Certainly, if this is Emily, she would have aged ten years' worth and yet, there she is before him, the woman of his dreams and his heart.
David needs closure and visits Jessup in prison, paying him for something, anything that would make Emily's whereabouts known. Jessup is a full-blown pervert, a man who lusted after women, attacked and killed many and buried them in the cellar of his home. What Kootnz writes of him makes one's skin crawl, yet he does seem to hold the secret to Emily's disappearance.
As David gets closer and closer to the truth, he is endangered more, and a new killer emerges to pick up the "legacy" of Jessup.
This was an intriguing story, one that had the reader looking at all the possibilities, and perhaps the ending is a bit contrived, but the story is both addicting and compelling. Recommended to those who love a heart pounding story that doesn't let you go until you have read the very last page.