Where Are The Children Now?: Return to where it all began with the bestselling Queen of Suspense
English
By (author): Alafair Burke Mary Higgins Clark
The highly anticipated follow-up to the Queen of Suspense's iconic bestseller, Where Are the Children?.
A lawyer turned successful podcaster, Missy has worked hard to put the past behind her.
More than four decades ago, her mother, Nancy Harmon, was convicted of the murder of her first two children and released on a technicality. Shunned by her family and the media, she was building a new life for herself in Cape Cod when her children from a second marriage, Missy and her brother Mike, vanished too. Once again the prime suspect, this time Nancy was able to confront the secrets buried in her past and rescue her kids from a dangerous predator.
But Nancys past has a long reach. Missy has recently married a man whose first wife died tragically, leaving him and their young daughter, Riley, behind. While Missy and her brother Mike help their mother relocate from Cape Cod to the equally idyllic Hamptons, Missys new stepdaughter goes missing.
As history chillingly repeats itself, Missy and Mike must draw on memories of their own abduction as they race to find Riley and save her from the same trauma they experienced or something much worse . . .
Just like the original, Where Are the Children Now? will keep you holding your breath until the very last page.
PRAISE FOR MARY HIGGINS CLARK:
I adore Mary Higgins Clark KARIN SLAUGHTER
Clark plays out her story like the pro that she is . . . flawless DAILY MIRROR
The Queen of Suspense is renowned for her fast-moving prose and dazzling plot twists GOOD BOOK GUIDE
Mary Higgins Clarks awesome gift for storytelling has always been the secret of her strength as a suspense novelist NEW YORK TIMES
Teeming with tantalizing twists, Clarks cracking tale . . . is a tempting and thought-provoking thriller BOOKLIST
Theres something special about Clarks thrillers . . . the compassion she extends to her characters PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Should come with a warning: start in the evening and youll be reading late into the night USA TODAY See more