Genre:
Psychological Suspense
Description:
“On a sweltering July morning in rural Tennessee, fifty-year-old
Rebecca Reynolds visits the family farm, where she literally stumbles across
the mutilated bodies of her parents and younger sister, a sister who had spent
life in a wheelchair after a birth fraught with complications.
Rebecca’s first thought is to call 911. Her second is to find her
estranged sister, Lena, who was disowned by the family years before. Her third
is to wonder how long it will be before Lena is arrested for the murder of
their family.
As the police gather evidence pointing to Lena, the sisters turn to
attorney Brian Stone. Convinced of Lena’s innocence, he agrees to take on the
case. But in a family ripped apart by dysfunction, is anyone truly innocent?”
Author:
“Melinda Clayton is the author of The Cedar Hollow Series, which
includes novels Appalachian Justice,
Return to Crutcher Mountain, Entangled Thorns, and Shadow Days.
Clayton also authored Blessed
Are the Wholly Broken and Making
Amends, two dark novels of tragedy and suspense.
In addition to writing, Clayton has an Ed.D. in Special Education
Administration and is a licensed psychotherapist in the states of Florida and
Colorado.”
For more, visit Clayton’s website.
Appraisal:
What a wild ride reading A Woman
Misunderstood was. It starts with the book’s protagonist, Rebecca, walking
into her childhood home and discovering the decomposing bodies of her mother,
father, and one of her sisters. That first short chapter ends with these words:
After I
finished screaming, my first thought was to call 911.
My second
was to find Lena, my surviving sister.
My third
was to wonder how much time we had before her arrest.
This is
important, this third thought of mine. If you stick with my story, you’ll
understand why.
I hesitate to say much about the story itself other than to say that
by the time you, the reader, have a full understanding of the complete
repercussions of these statements you’ll be dizzy from the unexpected twists
and turns, be shaking your head and saying, “well, I never saw that coming.”
FYI:
Some adult language.
Format/Typo
Issues:
No significant issues.
Rating:
***** Five Stars
Reviewed
by: BigAl
Approximate
word count: 50-55,000 words
1 comment:
Thank you so much for the review! I'm so glad you couldn't see it coming. ;-)
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