From the acclaimed author of the “ripping good” (The New York Times) debut novel Three Graves Full
comes a new thriller about a woman who digs into her unconventional
past to confirm what she suspects: her husband isn't what she thought he
was.
Dee Aldrich rebelled against her
off-center upbringing when she married the most conventional man she
could imagine: Patrick, her college sweetheart. But now, years later,
her marriage is falling apart and she’s starting to believe that her
husband has his eye on a new life...a life without her, one way or
another.
Haunted by memories of her late
mother Annette, a former covert operations asset, Dee reaches back into
her childhood to resurrect her mother’s lessons and the “spy games” they
played together, in which Dee learned memory tricks and, most
importantly, how and when to lie. But just as she begins determining the
course of the future, she makes a discovery that will change her life:
her mother left her a lot of money and her own husband seems to know
more about it than Dee does. Now, before it’s too late, she must
investigate her suspicions and untangle conspiracy from coincidence,
using her mother’s advice to steer her through the blind spots. The
trick, in the end, will be in deciding if a “normal life” is really what
she wants at all.
With pulse-pounding prose and atmospheric settings, Monday’s Lie is a thriller that delivers more of the “Hitchcockian menace” (Peter Straub) that made Three Graves Full a critical hit. For fans of the Coen brothers or Gillian Flynn, this is a book you won’t want to miss.