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Check for Availabilityout of stock. Click on the button below to search for this title in other formats. A Seahorse in the Thames
Synopses & ReviewsPublisher Comments:In this new novel by critically acclaimed author Susan Meissner, readers will again applaud the storytelling efforts that last year resulted in the author's previous book, A Window to the World, being named by Booklist Magazine as one of the top ten Christian novels of 2005. Alexa Poole's older sister, Rebecca, has lived at the Falkman Residential Center since an accident left her mentally compromised?vulnerable, innocent. Now, 17 years later, she has vanished. As Alexa searches for Rebecca, disturbing questions surface. Why did the car that Rebecca was riding in swerve off the road killing her college friend, Leanne McNeil? And what about the mysterious check for $50,000 found in Rebecca's room signed by her friend's father, Gavin McNeil? Review:"Christian novelist Meissner (A Window to the World; Why the Sky Is Blue) introduces the Poole family, who were happy once upon a time until, teenage daughter Rebecca was left with permanent brain damage after a car accident; the parents divorced, and Dad remarried a little too soon. Daughter Priscilla's anger propelled her across the Atlantic Ocean, and she has stayed in England ever since. Priscilla's twin, Alexa, has been left to hold things together as best she can — she visits her mom regularly, makes nice with her dad's new wife and checks in weekly at the group home where Rebecca's been stashed. But the Pooles' fragile equilibrium is shattered when Alexa has a health scare, and, if that's not troubling enough, Rebecca disappears, leaving behind only a mysterious note. Was she kidnapped? Did she leave of her own free will? Rebecca's disappearance sets in motion a series of events that will change the Poole family forever, either drawing them closer together or tearing them apart. Throughout, the dialogue is a tad stilted, and Alexa's romantic interest in her handyman distracts from the central emotional thrust of the novel — the tension and possible reconciliation among various family members. Still, the characters are well-developed and the plot moves along briskly. Fans of Jamie Langston Turner will enjoy this inspirational novel. (July)" Publishers Weekly (Copyright Reed Business Information, Inc.) Synopsis:signed by her friend's father, Gavin McNeil?
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