Sunday, December 19, 2010

Aspiration Phenomia Bulldogs



plays in this book, the garden, as I have already suggested when browsing, only a minor role. It's an important place, but is mentioned only in a few places, but it aptly been chosen as the cover image. But the novel is so exciting that I still want to introduce him.

The investment banker Lucy has left three years ago after the death of her young son her husband and family in California. She tries to start a new life in New York and to shed its past. It is in the midst of important negotiations as they learn of the sudden and unexpected death of her father. When she moves back to their home, it turns out that the police proceeds of a crime.

Lucy is not the only woman in her family who has lost a son in infancy. Her mother and her Russian Grandmother had to suffer the same fate. Lucy's mother suffered after the loss of her youngest child, a psychosis, from which it never recovered. In Lucy's family is nearby and there are several mysterious deaths which seem to suggest the police a link and in the course of the investigation more and more inconsistencies come to light.

votes Lucy's memories with real experiences in line or have their data as long as certain incidents and been told that they now deems this to be true? Driven by guilt feelings about her son, she is on their own inquiries and chapter by chapter is composed of the fragments - lies are exposed and long forgotten incidents turn out to be important details. To keep up

the voltage to the end of the book, you should refrain necessarily read already clinched the final!



Liz Rigbey: The Sunken Garden

Ullstein Verlag, 2005

0 comments:

Post a Comment