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Katia Lief

Autor(a) de Five Days in Summer

17+ Works 1,019 Membros 41 Reviews 2 Favorited

About the Author

Séries

Obras de Katia Lief

Five Days in Summer (2004) 166 cópias
A Map of the Dark (2018) 128 cópias
Seven Minutes to Noon (2005) 124 cópias
You Are Next (2010) 118 cópias
One Cold Night (2006) 111 cópias
Here She Lies (2007) 107 cópias
Next Time You See Me (2010) 70 cópias
The Money Kill (2013) 34 cópias
Nur 15 Sekunden (1764) 31 cópias
Last Night (The Searchers) (2019) 29 cópias
Einladung zum Sterben (2011) 23 cópias
Invisible Woman: A Novel (2024) 16 cópias
Love, Sex & the Wrong Bride (2005) 5 cópias
Soul Catcher (2011) 3 cópias
House of a Thousand Eyes (2021) 1 exemplar(es)

Associated Works

Tödliche Gaben: Die spannendsten Weihnachtskrimis (2009) — Contribuinte — 39 cópias
Tatort Tannenbaum: Kommissare feiern Weihnachten (2012) — Contribuinte — 9 cópias
Desperate Acts (2013) — Contribuinte — 4 cópias

Etiquetado

Conhecimento Comum

Membros

Resenhas

Invisible Woman is a story of a marriage, a friendship, and #MeToo. Joni Ackerman was once a trailblazing director, but her career took second place to her marriage and raising her children. Paul, her husband, has a high-powered career in the same industry, though they claimed different sectors, film for her and television for him. As the book opens, the family has been transplanted to New York for Paul’s career but with the children grown, she’s itching to get back in the fray and that would be in California, not New York. She feels out of place and displaced.

After the Weinstein scandal broke, the dam broke exposing other rapists. Joni reaches out to her former roommate, Valerie. They were best friends but something happened to Val and Joni feels culpable for not paying attention and for keeping it secret. She wants to go public. Val does not. Joni thinks Val blames her, but she could not be farther from the truth. Their once close friendship feels like estrangement. Val even takes out a restraining order on Joni.

Invisible Woman is a fast-paced thriller that makes many valuable points and for every revelation that people respect her more than she might think, I gave a little cheer. Go, Joni! Invisible Woman effectively shows how a woman’s confidence can be eroded with subtle, nearly invisible actions that undercut her efforts. It also shows the damage secrets can do, but also how the bonds of friendship can be pulled really hard and still bounce back.

I think the story would have benefited with just a bit less foreshadowing. The major revelations were anticipated. It was nice to see I guessed right, but I should not even be guessing so early. I think keeping a secret from readers is the essence of suspense, but I hate when I guess it too early.

I think Lief did well with her characters. At first Joni seems all put together, accomplished filmmaker and loving mother in a loving marriage, but the cracks start to show and you learn how she has been diminished over time as this feminist filmmaker conforms to gender norms and you see how her accomplishments are over-shadowed. As you learn this, you also start to reevaluate her husband, her children, and her friend This is done brilliantly.

I also love the way Patricia Highsmith is such a catalyst in Joni’s self-discovery. It makes it even better to learn that the books were a gift from Val long ago. I love how different books appear to become almost part of the story.

Invisible Woman at Grove Atlantic
Katia Lief

https://tonstantweaderreviews.wordpress.com/2024/01/25/invisible-woman-by-katia-...
… (mais)
 
Marcado
Tonstant.Weader | Jan 25, 2024 |
I gave this two stars only because while the plot itself was good; the main character was too wishy washy and totally weak. Also, there was way too much breast milk, breast pumping, milk dropping, my baby is missing omg my life is over, and did I mention the breast milk dropping? Seriously, I just skimmed over much of the final1/4 because I just wanted to find out whodunnit. Lief's next book better not have ANY babies or new moms in it.
 
Marcado
kwskultety | outras 3 resenhas | Jul 4, 2023 |
A good read, but a little predictable. The characters are okay, but there is little development. A little heavy on "oh, so unexpected story twists". Maybe I'll try another book by this author someday.
 
Marcado
Ellemir | outras 3 resenhas | May 25, 2022 |
Ach! Present tense narrative. Just don’t like it, sorry. For me, personally, it’s awkward and a bit distracting. However, that’s just me, and I’m probably in the minority with this aversion. My rating is in no way influenced by that. But, if anyone else shares my dislike…this is a heads-up!

More importantly, this was a very sophisticated thriller. The writing is excellent: insightful and intelligent and intense. It’s a story packed with mystery and suspense.

FBI agent Elsa Myers searches for missing people: a distressing task when the victims are young teenagers. And when they’re found, they are sometimes corpses. So when young Ruby goes missing, Elsa is determined to find her before she ends up like the latter. But she has to juggle her job at the same time as dealing with her terminally ill father. The father who, ambiguously, failed her in her childhood, but at the same time shares her devastating secret.

The story rolls along at a good pace; it’s compelling and well written: no unnecessary padding, but at the same time no detail is overlooked.

Without doubt, an author to look out for.
… (mais)
 
Marcado
Librogirl | outras 12 resenhas | Mar 13, 2022 |

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Estatísticas

Obras
17
Also by
3
Membros
1,019
Popularidade
#25,282
Avaliação
½ 3.4
Resenhas
41
ISBNs
102
Idiomas
3
Favorito
2

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