Product info
A gripping edge-of-your-seat thriller of family intrigue and dark secrets from the author of Someone Is Watching and See Jane Run. There was no shortage of words she could use to describe her father almost none of them complimentary. Serves you damn right she thought. A voice mail from her estranged sister Melanie sends Robin s heart racing and her mind spiraling in a full-blown panic attack. Melanie s message is dire: Their father his second wife and his twelve-year-old stepdaughter have been shot--likely in a home invasion--and lie in the hospital in critical condition. It s been more than five years since Robin turned her back on her father when he married her best friend. Five years since she said goodbye to her hometown of Red Bluff California and became a therapist. More than two years since Robin and Melanie have spoken. Yet even with all that distance and time and acrimony the past is always with Robin. Now she must return to the family she left behind. As she attempts to mend fences while her father clings to life Robin begins to wonder if there is more to the tragedy than a botched burglary attempt. It seems that everyone--Robin s mercurial sister her less-than-communicative nephew her absent brother and even Tara her father s wife--has something to hide. And someone may have put them all in grave danger. New York Times bestselling author Joy Fielding has written a gripping edge-of-your-seat thriller of family intrigue and dark secrets. The Bad Daughter explores the deadly differences between the lies we want to believe and the truths we wish not to know. Praise for The Bad Daughter So expert is [Joy] Fielding at seeding clues that readers will never see the final plot twist coming. The acutely portrayed family dynamics lend pathos and a certain schadenfreudian frisson to the proceedings. An author who knows her way around suburban angst. --Kirkus Reviews Fielding a sure hand at psychological suspense amps up tension nicely here as the narrative reaches a high-energy conclusion. --Booklist [Keeps] the reader turning the pages until the bombshell final shocker. --Publishers Weekly
... read more.