Thursday, June 13, 2013

Did You See It Coming? Plot Twists and Surprise Endings!

Are you a fan of plot twists and surprise endings that set you reeling?  Whether we love them or hate them -- we have to admit they keep us turning pages!  If you're in the mood for some twists and turns this summer --  here are a few books that should keep you guessing until the very end:



The Execution of Noa P. Singleton  by Elizabeth L. Silver

Noa P. Singleton, six-months away from execution for the murder of a young woman committed ten years earlier, receives a startling offer from the mother of the victim.  The woman, a high-powered attorney, will argue that Noa's life should be spared in exchange for an explanation as to why Noa killed her daughter, a story that Noa has steadfastly refused to share.


 
Reconstructing Amelia  by Kimberly McCreight

Grieving and guilt-stricken over her teen-aged daughter's recent suicide, a lawyer receives a cryptic text message indicating that her daughter may not have taken her own life.  With the help of a sympathetic detective, she retraces the last weeks of her daughter's life.  


The Dinner  by Herman Koch

Two brothers and their wives meet for dinner at a posh Amsterdam restaurant.  The evening takes a sinister turn when the dinner conversation shifts to a discussion of an incident involving the children of the two couples. 


 
Defending Jacob  by William Landay

The family life of a respected prosecuting attorney is thrown into turmoil when his middle-school-aged son becomes the main suspect in the murder of a classmate.   In his quest to defend his son, he begins to suspect that his own troubled past may play a part in the crime. 



 Rebecca  by Daphne DuMaurier

Married after a whirlwind courtship, a shy, young bride returns to her new husband's vast estate to face haunting comparisons to his beautiful first wife, who died in a tragic accident just a few years before.  This classic, psychological tale was adapted into an Oscar-winning Best Picture by Alfred Hitchcock in 1940, that starred Laurence Olivier and Joan Fontaine.

The Double Bind  by Chris Bohjalian

A young social worker, emotionally-scarred by a vicious physical assault she survived six years earlier, seeks to unravel the mystery behind a series of old photographs found in the possession of a recently deceased homeless man who was a resident of the shelter where she works.   Among the images she finds is a photograph of herself that was taken the day she was attacked. 
 Presumed Innocent  by Scott Turow

The personal and professional lives of a married prosecuting attorney collide in nightmare fashion when he is accused of the brutal rape and murder of a colleague with whom he was having an affair.  Chicago lawyer and best-selling author Turow's classic legal thriller was made into a hit film starring Harrison Ford in 1990, and a sequel to the story, entitled Innocent, was published in 2010.  





The Cove:  A Novel  by Ron Rash

A brother and sister struggle to maintain their homestead in the stark Appalachian Valley during WWI.  The arrival of a mute stranger on their property brings welcome change and renewed hope to their lonely lives, although it becomes clear the man may be hiding secrets about his past. 

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