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Search resuls for: "Flynn Berry"


3 mentions found


HOLLY, by Stephen KingA friend of mine has become a scaredy-cat since having a baby. She has been forcing herself to watch horror movies through parted fingers, hoping they will steel her nerves for the frights of everyday life. I thought of my friend’s experiment while reading “Holly,” the new mystery from Stephen King: Here is a thriller scary enough to test its readers’ mettle — and toughen them up. Holly Gibney, a private investigator, is attending her mother’s funeral when a woman calls asking for help finding her missing daughter. Mercedes’ and she just kind of stole the book and stole my heart.” Her presence balances the new novel’s darkness.
Persons: HOLLY, Stephen King, Holly, mettle, Holly Gibney, Kate Atkinson, Jackson Brodie, King, , she’s, “ Mr, Mercedes, Bill Hodges, ” King, Holly “, Mr, Mercedes ’
HOW TO LOVE YOUR DAUGHTER, by Hila Blum. A woman travels for thousands of miles to spy on a family at the start of “How to Love Your Daughter,” by Hila Blum. Inside are her daughter Leah and her two granddaughters, but they don’t know she is outside: Yoella hasn’t seen Leah in years and has never met her granddaughters. For six years, Leah has made sporadic calls to her mother from around the world, “from Dharamsala, Bangalore, Hanoi, Chiang Mai. She puts herself on trial as a mother, summoning witnesses, poring over the evidence, searching for a crime.
Persons: Hila Blum, Daniella Zamir, Yoella, Leah, Yoella hasn’t, Chiang Mai, , poring Locations: Dharamsala, Bangalore, Hanoi, Netherlands
THE EDEN TEST, by Adam SternberghA woman surprises her husband with a weeklong couples’ retreat in “The Eden Test,” Adam Sternbergh’s new thriller. Threat shimmers around their isolated cabin, though one suspects that nothing would force them to endure anything more painful than a week of “working on the relationship.”On their first date, three years earlier, Daisy licked a smudge of crème brûlée off Craig’s chin, a mischievous gesture that bound them together. They spent weekends together eating croissants and reading the paper, “its sections unfurled all around them like blueprints for some brazen upcoming heist.” “The Eden Test” shows how a couple in love can seem like a two-person army, fugitives from the outside world. As the novel’s epigraph, from Adam Phillips, puts it, “A couple is a conspiracy in search of a crime.”Now, Daisy and Craig appear less like co-conspirators than adversaries. The denim overalls that Craig used to strip off Daisy have become “those [expletive] overalls she always wears.” And Daisy is cleareyed about Craig’s failings, from his infidelities to his pretension about restaurants, “as though he’d studied in the finest culinary schools of Europe, rather than being just another dude in Brooklyn with a credit card and a subscription to Bon Appétit.” Craig is preparing to leave her for his mistress, and Daisy hasn’t been entirely honest with him, either.
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