Rating: Summary: Another hit for Andrew Klavan! Review: "Man and Wife" is an excellent novel and once I started it I couldn't put it down! Andrew Klavan gets better with every novel and he's definitely made it to my favorite author list. I HIGHLY recommend it to anyone who wants a story of suspense that keeps you on the edge of your seat right to the last page. In my opinion this novel is a definite MUST READ!!
Rating: Summary: Another hit for Andrew Klavan! Review: "Man and Wife" is an excellent novel and once I started it I couldn't put it down! Andrew Klavan gets better with every novel and he's definitely made it to my favorite author list. I HIGHLY recommend it to anyone who wants a story of suspense that keeps you on the edge of your seat right to the last page. In my opinion this novel is a definite MUST READ!!
Rating: Summary: seamlessly written Review: Andrew Klavan has presented us with a seamlessly written thriller which will draw you in immediately and keep your attention throughout. Psychiatrist Cal Bradley seems to have found the perfect wife in Marie, his spouse of fifteen years. Then a series of upsetting events causes him to doubt that he truly knows the woman who seems so devoted to him. He's confronted with ethical problems in his profession as his domestic world begins to come apart. Peter Blue, a l9 year old patient, is a compelling presence---troubled and suicidal, yet also possessed of a healing power which revitalizes other troubled young people around him. Peter's secrets are inexplicably interwoven with Marie's mysterious past. Klavan's book, in the best thriller tradition, will enchant you.
Rating: Summary: Definite Page Turner! Review: At the end of every chapter the author has you wanting to know what will happen next. I couldn't put the book down. Normally, I read from a more literary mix, however, this was a very nice break. I am certainly going to check Klavan's other books.
Rating: Summary: Definite Page Turner! Review: At the end of every chapter the author has you wanting to know what will happen next. I couldn't put the book down. Normally, I read from a more literary mix, however, this was a very nice break. I am certainly going to check Klavan's other books.
Rating: Summary: Reality is God's way of singing Review: Great book. There are some false moves here but its just Klavan's way to keep his readers guessing. The ending was an unexpected surprise and nice to boot. Klavan is a master at the craft of creating a believeable plot with nagging mystery throughout.
Rating: Summary: Reality is God's way of singing Review: Great book. There are some false moves here but its just Klavan's way to keep his readers guessing. The ending was an unexpected surprise and nice to boot. Klavan is a master at the craft of creating a believeable plot with nagging mystery throughout.
Rating: Summary: Masterpiece!! Review: Highly recommended. Story keeps a riveting pace from start to finish. A real journey through the human spirit.
Rating: Summary: A gripping novel of psychological suspense. Review: In Andrew Klavan's novel, "Man and Wife," Cal Bradley is a respected psychiatrist who heads up a clinic in a quiet New England town. Cal lives an idyllic life with his lovely wife, Marie, and their three young children. Marie is a former waitress who had a violent and traumatic childhood which she prefers to forget. Now, she is a homebody and a regular churchgoer who is completely devoted to Cal and the kids. Life is good. Naturally, things do not stay that way. Cal is suddenly faced with the troubling case of Peter Blue, a nineteen-year-old boy who has been arrested for assault, burglary, arson and threatening a police officer. The only way to keep Peter out of jail, where he has already attempted suicide, is to bring him to Cal's clinic for an assessment and then psychiatric treatment. Cal not only delves into Peter's psyche, but he explores his own as well, flashing back to memories of his relationship with his troubled parents and his self-destructive sister, Mina. Cal's problems are just beginning. On an outing in the woods, he thinks that he spots his wife talking to a stranger who seems to know her. Marie denies that the incident took place. Soon Cal and his family are threatened, and he fears that something or someone is out to destroy him. Events soon spiral out of control and Cal faces psychological and moral dilemmas that threaten to tear both him and his family apart. Klavan does a masterful job of building up suspense and he manages to keep the reader off guard. Is Cal imagining the threats to his family? Is there really a mysterious stranger out to get him? We are not sure of the answers to these questions at first, and we are compelled to keep reading to figure out what is really going on. The characters are vividly and sympathetically depicted and Klavans's lush descriptions of the scenic New England landscape contrast nicely with the sinister events in the novel. "Man and Wife" is a taut and accomplished psychological thriller that will keep you up at night until you have turned the last page. Klavan explores the themes of how our troubled pasts, including the secrets we keep and the lies that we tell, inevitably come back to haunt us in one way or another.
Rating: Summary: A gripping novel of psychological suspense. Review: In Andrew Klavan's novel, "Man and Wife," Cal Bradley is a respected psychiatrist who heads up a clinic in a quiet New England town. Cal lives an idyllic life with his lovely wife, Marie, and their three young children. Marie is a former waitress who had a violent and traumatic childhood which she prefers to forget. Now, she is a homebody and a regular churchgoer who is completely devoted to Cal and the kids. Life is good. Naturally, things do not stay that way. Cal is suddenly faced with the troubling case of Peter Blue, a nineteen-year-old boy who has been arrested for assault, burglary, arson and threatening a police officer. The only way to keep Peter out of jail, where he has already attempted suicide, is to bring him to Cal's clinic for an assessment and then psychiatric treatment. Cal not only delves into Peter's psyche, but he explores his own as well, flashing back to memories of his relationship with his troubled parents and his self-destructive sister, Mina. Cal's problems are just beginning. On an outing in the woods, he thinks that he spots his wife talking to a stranger who seems to know her. Marie denies that the incident took place. Soon Cal and his family are threatened, and he fears that something or someone is out to destroy him. Events soon spiral out of control and Cal faces psychological and moral dilemmas that threaten to tear both him and his family apart. Klavan does a masterful job of building up suspense and he manages to keep the reader off guard. Is Cal imagining the threats to his family? Is there really a mysterious stranger out to get him? We are not sure of the answers to these questions at first, and we are compelled to keep reading to figure out what is really going on. The characters are vividly and sympathetically depicted and Klavans's lush descriptions of the scenic New England landscape contrast nicely with the sinister events in the novel. "Man and Wife" is a taut and accomplished psychological thriller that will keep you up at night until you have turned the last page. Klavan explores the themes of how our troubled pasts, including the secrets we keep and the lies that we tell, inevitably come back to haunt us in one way or another.
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