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Family & Friendship - Fiction, Thrillers

The Secret Keepers

by Julie Mars
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Overview

A mesmerizing account of a man trying to atone for a sordid past by living a normal life, but becoming obsessed with a woman he sees everyday at the post office.

"Atmospheric, taut, and psychologically rich... an unusually smart debut" Publishers Weekly

Synopsis

A mesmerizing account of a man trying to atone for a sordid past by living a normal life, but becoming obsessed with a woman he sees everyday at the post office.

"Atmospheric, taut, and psychologically rich... an unusually smart debut" Publishers Weekly

Publishers Weekly

Loner Steve Dant, a former junkie who now runs four miles a day, has been living in New York for five months while working at a literary quarterly before he spots the svelte and lovely Christine Timberlake in the post office, reading her mail. When she leaves her keys, he picks them up, intending to return them to her. Instead, in this atmospheric, taut, psychologically rich first novel, an urban mystery driven more by character than plot, Steve decides to pocket the keys and have them duplicated. While Christine is at work, he enters her apartment, discovering, among other things, many books on the subject of incest. Meanwhile, Christine, who works as a bartender, is horrified by the sudden appearance of her ex-husband, Parker Horton. Telling her he's hired a private detective to find their daughter, Petra, whom Christine has hidden away in a school for the mentally ill on Cape Cod, Parker makes it clear he wants to return to court and obtain custody of their child. When the PI sees Steve slipping in and out of Christine's apartment, he assumes Steve is Christine's boyfriend, though he can't understand why he never sees them together. Things get complicated after Christine is robbed and assaulted; Steve discovers her in her apartment, bloody and drifting in and out of consciousness, mumbling about her fears for Petra if Parker locates her. Determined to help Christine, Steve decides to head off for Cape Cod. The detective trails Steve, setting off a multifaceted chase that ends in a surprising, if somewhat unbelievable, resolution. Mars's theme, that everybody harbors secrets--which leads to all her characters assuming they know things about the others that in fact are far from the truth-adds dimension to the characterization and also to the intrigue and suspense in this unusually smart debut. (June) Copyright 2000 Cahners Business Information.|

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Editorials

Publishers Weekly - Publisher's Weekly

Loner Steve Dant, a former junkie who now runs four miles a day, has been living in New York for five months while working at a literary quarterly before he spots the svelte and lovely Christine Timberlake in the post office, reading her mail. When she leaves her keys, he picks them up, intending to return them to her. Instead, in this atmospheric, taut, psychologically rich first novel, an urban mystery driven more by character than plot, Steve decides to pocket the keys and have them duplicated. While Christine is at work, he enters her apartment, discovering, among other things, many books on the subject of incest. Meanwhile, Christine, who works as a bartender, is horrified by the sudden appearance of her ex-husband, Parker Horton. Telling her he's hired a private detective to find their daughter, Petra, whom Christine has hidden away in a school for the mentally ill on Cape Cod, Parker makes it clear he wants to return to court and obtain custody of their child. When the PI sees Steve slipping in and out of Christine's apartment, he assumes Steve is Christine's boyfriend, though he can't understand why he never sees them together. Things get complicated after Christine is robbed and assaulted; Steve discovers her in her apartment, bloody and drifting in and out of consciousness, mumbling about her fears for Petra if Parker locates her. Determined to help Christine, Steve decides to head off for Cape Cod. The detective trails Steve, setting off a multifaceted chase that ends in a surprising, if somewhat unbelievable, resolution. Mars's theme, that everybody harbors secrets--which leads to all her characters assuming they know things about the others that in fact are far from the truth-adds dimension to the characterization and also to the intrigue and suspense in this unusually smart debut. (June) Copyright 2000 Cahners Business Information.|

Internet Book Watch

Steve Dant first noticed the tall woman when he delivered the outgoing mail including copies of the magazine Expression to subscribers at the Stuyvesant Post Office on 14th Street. Though not obsessed, at least not in a sexual sense, Steven has enjoyed watching her fluid motions for the past three months. He decides to learn more about his mark, Christine Timberlake by performing a bit of amateur sleuthing, which is relatively easy for Steven, a person ignored in a crowd of two. He obtains one of her letters, breaks into her apartment, and learns about her child Petra However, Steven does not yet know that one person has noticed his pursuit of Christine. Christine's former husband who wants to gain custody of their child has retained professional private investigator Greg Litner. To Greg and his client, any scandal (real or not) will suffice. Greg believes Steven is the key to satisfying his customer. The Secret Keepers is a weird relationship drama that worked because of the depth provided to the main characters. that enables to readers to understand their motives and actions. The story line is a well-crafted tale It allows the audience to follow the exploits of Steven's snooping into Christine's life and the aftermath his actions cause. Still, what makes Julie Mars' novel a winning tale for the audience is the way each key cast member tries to keep secrets from one another even as they unknowingly share so much. This is a wonderful, wacky, and wild ride.
—Internet Book Watch

Kirkus Reviews

A sometimes rough-edged first novel charts the rocky road that three characters, maimed by their pasts, take to confession and understanding. When Steve Dant, a recovering drug addict now working for a New York literary quarterly, notices Christine Timberlake at the local post office, he soon finds himself drawn to her beauty. Each week when he mails the office correspondence, he observes Christine arriving at the same time to retrieve anxiously from her box a slim envelope. Then there's Steve. Steve has no friends and has deliberately kept to himself as he fights his demons by jogging regularly, watching videos, and going to museums on weekends, but he can't keep away from Christine. When she drops her keys accidentally, he picks them up, has them copied, and while she's at work—she tends a local bar—checks out her apartment. Christine, recently divorced from restaurant-owner Parker Horton, is terrified that Parker will find Petra, their mentally ill young daughter whose condition, Christine believes, was caused by incest. When Parker, desperate to see Petra, hires a p.i. to trail Christine, and Steve, now in love with her and eager to help, discovers where Petra is, the action speeds up. As Christine recovers from a brutal robbery and assault, Steve, followed by the detective heads to Cape Cod, where Petra is hospitalized. There, fearful that the p.i. will take Petra back to Parker, he persuades the authorities to release her into his care. Meanwhile, as a terrified Parker and Christine cooperate to recover her daughter, they revisit their unhappy pasts and confess their secret (and, alas, unsurprising) fears. By the close, Steve will also begin to have a bettersenseof himself and his past. A quirky, fast -paced plot, with characters whose pasts seem almost too neatly awful.

Book Details

Published
May 1, 2000
Publisher
GreyCore Press
Pages
288
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780967185149

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