She would never have left him and their seven-year-old daughter Valentina of her own free will-or would she?Īs these two lives intersect, The Stranger in the Mirror hooks readers with riveting drama, told with Liv Constantine’s hallmark blend of glamour, tense psychological thrills, and jaw-dropping twists. In a posh home in the Boston suburbs, Julian tries to figure out what happened to his loving, caring wife, Cassandra, who disappeared without a trace two years ago. Or why she can’t shake the notion that she may have done something very, very bad. Or how she ended up injured on the side of a road. But the story seems to go off into areas that seemed the only purpose was to add more pages. Koontz delves into the lives of the main characters in a way that makes you root for them. While her physical wounds healed, Addison’s memory never returned. Koontz could have cut this book down by about 300 pages and it would have been a much better book. A few years ago, a kind driver found her bleeding next to a New Jersey highway and rescued her. It’s because Addison doesn't know who she really is. It’s not her fiancé he’s a wonderful man. 'Jaw-dropping twists with an unsettling edge that you’ll need a few days at the beach to recover.' -Reese's Book ClubĪddison’s about to get married, but she’s not looking forward to the big day. A diabolically twisty, psychologically unsettling novel about a woman with no recollection of her past from the authors of the Reese Witherspoon Book Club pick The Last Mrs.
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