Synopses & Reviews
On June 22,1986, Stan Howard was stabbed in his bed, his ten-year-old daughter Rachel sleeping in the next room. Unable to fully process the tragedy, Rachel coped the only way she knew how by trying to pretend the murder never happened. More then fifteen years later, Rachel became engaged, and the need to confront the night of her father's death before entering the next phase of her life grew strong. Her father's murder remained unsolved, and many questions unanswered and unasked. In The Lost Night, Rachel shares her father's story, and her keen investigation of memory, truth, and how a family moves on from a tragedy for which they may never find the answers. BACKCOVER: ?The Lost Night is enthralling, a skillfully narrated story that begins as a tale of detection but becomes something more.?
?The New York Times
?No novel based on Ms. Howard's life, no matter how skillfully crafted, could have been as believable as The Lost Night. It is a quintessentially American narrative of self-creation and redemption, a postmodern Gatsby with a hard-earned, doubt-tinged happy ending. I don?t know when I?ve read a better first book.?
?The Wall Street Journal
?Powerful.?
?San Francisco Chronicle
?The Lost Night illuminates a bond between a father and a daughter that neither time nor death can undo.?
?The Washington Post Book World
Synopsis
On June 22,1986, Stan Howard was stabbed in his bed, his ten-year-old daughter Rachel sleeping in the next room. Unable to fully process the tragedy, Rachel coped the only way she knew how by trying to pretend the murder never happened. More then fifteen years later, Rachel became engaged, and the need to confront the night of her fathers death before entering the next phase of her life grew strong. Her fathers murder remained unsolved, and many questions unanswered and unasked. In The Lost Night, Rachel shares her fathers story, and her keen investigation of memory, truth, and how a family moves on from a tragedy for which they may never find the answers.
Synopsis
The Lost Night is enthralling, a skillfully narrated story that begins as a tale of detection but becomes something more.
The New York Times
No novel based on Ms. Howards life, no matter how skillfully crafted, could have been as believable as The Lost Night. It is a quintessentially American narrative of self-creation and redemption, a postmodern Gatsby with a hard-earned, doubt-tinged happy ending. I dont know when Ive read a better first book.
The Wall Street Journal
Powerful.
San Francisco Chronicle
The Lost Night illuminates a bond between a father and a daughter that neither time nor death can undo.
The Washington Post Book World
About the Author
RACHEL HOWARD writes and reviews for the San Francisco Chronicle.