great book. MHC is one of the best. She out did her self once again. Made you feel as you were there.
Clark serves up her usual tasty tale of a woman threatened by a tragedy in her past, complete with multiple suspects and tangled web of mayhem.

Carrie H. (
CWDidIt) wrote on 5/5/2008...
Can't say enough about MHC! Any of her books are awesome! She gets you from about the 3rd page on! Recommend any of her books!
Typical of the latest books by Mary Higgins Clark, this book is too formulaic and predictable. The ending is a letdown because it is obvious in the last 3rd of the book what is going to transpire. The ending is trite and MHC has wrapped everything up in a nice little package.
Another good book from Mary Higgins Clark!
A bit draggy in places but still a good story. Quick read.
A young woman is ensnared into returning to a place she had wanted to leave behind forever---her childhood home. There, at the age of ten, Liza Barton had shot her mother, trying desperately to protect her from her estranged stepfather, Ted. Despite his claim that the shooting was a deliberate act, the Juvenile Court ruled the death an accident. To erase Liza's past, her adoptive parents change her name to Celia. At age twenty-eight, a successful interior designer, she marries a childless sixty-year-old widower, Laurence Foster, and they have a son. Before their marriage, she revelas to him her true identity. Two years later, on his deathbed, he makes her swear never to tell anyone so that their son, Jack, will not carry the stigma of her past. Two years later, Celia is happily remarried. Her peace of mind is shattered when her new husband, Alex Nolan, surprises her with a gift---the house in Mendham, New Jersey, where she killed her mother.
Excellent read. I am so addicted to Higgins Clark that I can no longer wait for the paperback versions.
This was an excellent book!