The Widow
Material type:
- 9780552172363
- F/BAR
Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Notes | Date due | Barcode | Item holds | |
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Colombo | F/BAR | Checked out | 01/10/2024 | CA00022427 | |||
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Orion City Fiction | F/BAR |
Available
Order online |
Available at Orion City. | CA00022957 |
Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:
THE SUNDAY TIMES AND NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER, AND RICHARD & JUDY BOOK CLUB PICK
'If you liked GONE GIRL and THE GIRL ON THE TRAIN, you might want to pick up THE WIDOW by Fiona Barton. Engrossing. Suspenseful' Stephen King
We've all seen him- the man - the monster - staring from the front page of every newspaper, accused of a terrible crime.
But what about her- the woman who grips his arm on the courtroom stairs - the wife who stands by him?
Jean Taylor's life was blissfully ordinary. Nice house, nice husband. Glen was all she'd ever wanted- her Prince Charming.
Until he became that man accused, that monster on the front page. Jean was married to a man everyone thought capable of unimaginable evil.
But now Glen is dead and she's alone for the first time, free to tell her story on her own terms.
Jean Taylor is going to tell us what she knows.
***** 'The book really got under my skin and had me turning pages at a rate of knots, unable to tear myself away.'
***** 'An utterly addictive read that I couldn't put down.'
***** 'Clever twists and turns . . . kept me on my toes until the end.'
Read Fiona Barton's other tantalising thrillers- THE CHILD, THE SUSPECT and LOCAL GONE MISSING - out now.
£7.99
Excerpt provided by Syndetics
Reviews provided by Syndetics
Library Journal Review
While the titular widow is the character around which all others circle, she's certainly not alone in holding secrets. Jean Taylor (read with unnerving control by Hannah Curtis) stood by her husband, Glen, through the heinous accusations leveled against him, until a week ago when he died suddenly in a freak accident. The determined reporter (read with crisp efficiency by Mandy Williams) wants the front-page scoop about Jean's suffering. The exasperated detective (voiced with convincing frustration by Nicholas Guy Smith) is obsessed with fully revealing the alleged crime. The mother (read with raw desperation by Jayne Entwistle) of the little girl Glen was charged with, then acquitted of, snatching (and worse) just wants to know what happened to her baby. Glen (chillingly voiced by Steve West) has endless explanations and justifications for everything he did-and didn't do. Declarations, promises, manipulations, and confessions collide over a dead man who can only speak the truth through the perfectly devoted wife he left behind. Verdict Barton's addictive, hair-raising debut further augments the expanding shelf of alarming, across-the-pond imports, including Paula Hawkins's The Girl on the Train, S.J. Watson's Before I Go to Sleep, and Tana French's "Dublin Murder Squad" series. ["Though the characters are flatly drawn, the mystery of what actually happened.will draw in readers until the final page": LJ 2/1/16 review of the NAL hc.]-Terry Hong, Smithsonian BookDragon, Washington, DC © Copyright 2016. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.Publishers Weekly Review
With the disappearance of two-year-old Bella Eliot at its core, Barton's novel combines elements of British police procedure with a psychological study of its three main characters: Jean Taylor, the widow of the title, whose overbearing husband, Glen, once the prime suspect in Bella's kidnapping, has died in an automobile accident; Det. Insp. Bob Sparks, whose quest to find Bella becomes obsessive; and Kate Waters, a reporter whose journalistic ideals are threatened by her exploitation of Jean. A quintet of performers reads the novel. Hannah Curtis, responsible for Jean's first-person accounts, slowly adds a bit of steel as she shifts from polite, subservient wife to something quite different. Nicholas Guy Smith handles Bob's chapters, catching the detective's fluctuating moods as well as his unhealthily increasing zeal in pursuing the investigation. He also portrays the other coppers and an assortment of witnesses and suspects, chief among them an angry Cockney with something to hide. Mandy Williams initially endows journo Kate with at least a shred of decency that's whittled away when she gives in to the demands of her unsympathetic editor. In somewhat smaller roles, Jayne Entwistle's turn as Bella's mother is properly weepy and resentful, while Steve West's Glen, stretching out the suspense, dies angrily maintaining his innocence. A NAL hardcover. (Feb.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.Booklist Review
A missing child, an unreliable narrator two staples of the best psychological suspense. Jean Taylor is the woman in the courtroom, the wife sitting next to a man accused of horrible things. The man is Glen Taylor, a delivery driver suspected of abducting two-year-old Bella Elliott. The problem is, there's no body and the one hint of a confession was obtained illegally. Several years after his trial is dismissed, Glen dies in random traffic accident. Now Jean isn't the wife; she's the widow. Reporter Kate Waters is determined to get to the bottom of the story that's haunted her for years. With Glen gone, will Jean finally open up about what really happened? Chapters jump from the days around Bella's disappearance to Jean's uneasy move into widowhood. Little slips, tiny cracks in her story, make the reader wonder whether Jean's version should be the final say in what happened. A chilling British read that will appeal to fans of The Girl on the Train.--Keefe, Karen Copyright 2016 BooklistKirkus Book Review
A woman whose recently deceased husband was the prime suspect in a horrific crime struggles with howand ifshe wants to step out from behind his shadow. Only a week after Jean Taylor's husband, Glen, stumbled in front of a London bus and died, the titular widow is beset by journalists begging for the exclusive rights to her story. Told from alternating perspectivesthe widow, the journalist, the detectiveand ping-ponging back and forth in time, Barton's debut is unfortunately more conventional than it first appears. At its core is the abduction of 2-year-old Bella Elliott from her Southampton backyard. With no immediate leads, the investigation, led by DI Bob Sparkes, flounders for weeks, which turn into months, until a tip leads Sparkes and his team to a blue van seen in the vicinity and thus to Glen, a delivery driver. Jean thought her marriage to Glen was the stuff of fairy tales: they'd married young, and he'd promised to always take care of her. She's the faithful, steadfast wife, even when the police start poking around Glen's life and it's revealed that he has a proclivity for child pornographyJean refers to it as his "nonsense." But the question of how much she really knows about Glen's guilthe was acquitted on all charges and successfully sued the police, but Bella is still missingis what the Daily Post's Kate Waters, who finally coaxes the story out of her, is determined to uncover. The idea of a woman who stands beside an alleged monster is an intriguing one, and very nearly well-executed here, if it weren't bogged down with other too-familiar plotlines. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.There are no comments on this title.