From the author of The Girl on the Train. Lots of characters to track in the beginning due to the chapters being told in POV form. It was a good read in the end.
From Goodreads.com:
A single mother turns up
dead at the bottom of the river that runs through town. Earlier in the
summer, a vulnerable teenage girl met the same fate. They are not the
first women lost to these dark waters, but their deaths disturb the
river and its history, dredging up secrets long submerged.
Left
behind is a lonely fifteen-year-old girl. Parentless and friendless, she
now finds herself in the care of her mother's sister, a fearful
stranger who has been dragged back to the place she deliberately ran
from—a place to which she vowed she'd never return.
With the same
propulsive writing and acute understanding of human instincts that
captivated millions of readers around the world in her explosive debut
thriller, The Girl on the Train, Paula Hawkins delivers an urgent,
twisting, deeply satisfying read that hinges on the deceptiveness of
emotion and memory, as well as the devastating ways that the past can
reach a long arm into the present.
Beware a calm surface—you never know what lies beneath.
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