Clark Hayden is a graduate student trying to help his mother navigate through the loss of his father while she continues to live in their house near Washington DC. With his mother’s diminishing mental capacity becoming the norm, Clark expects a certain amount of craziness as he heads home for the holidays. What he couldn’t possibly anticipate, though, is that he would find himself catapulted into the middle of a terrorist operation. As the holiday festivities reach a crescendo, a terrorist cell – which happens to be across the street – is activated. Suddenly Clark is discovering things he never knew about deadly chemicals, secret government operations, suspiciously missing neighbors, and the intentions of a gorgeous IRS auditor. Clark’s quiet suburban neighborhood is about to become one of the most deadly places on the planet, and it’s up to Clark to prevent the loss of hundreds of thousands of innocent lives in the nation’s capital.
Still Summer by Jacquelyn Mitchard
Still Summer
It’s been a while since I read anything by Jacquelyn and I couldn’t remember what kind of books she wrote, turns out Still Summer is some sort of chick lit meets family drama meets thriller – only problem being in trying to be all of those things it didn’t quite gel together properly.
In short this is a book about four women who charter a boat to sail around the Caribbean to spend some quality time together and catch up on old times. Throw in a last minute illness which means one woman can’t go and a teenage daughter is taken along instead, a rusty can opener, a couple of tragic accidents and some modern day pirates and instead of a dream vacation you have a nightmare on the open sea.
Before I Go To Sleep by S J Watson
Before I Go To Sleep
Have you ever imagined what it would be like to lose your memory? To wake up every morning expecting to be twenty something and find yourself in a strange room, in a strange bed next to a man you don’t recognise, and then to see yourself in a mirror and not recognise the forty something face looking back at you? That’s what Christine’s life is like. Every day she has to be told who she is and what has happened in her life, and every night she goes to sleep and forgets it all over again. The question is, can she trust the people in her life who are telling her the things she is supposed to remember but has absolutely no recollection of?
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