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The Deepest Water

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

Considered "one of the masters of psychological fiction in America" (San Francisco Chronicle), Kate Wilhelm sews up an irresistibly chilling puzzle that will keep listeners captivated until the very end.

When Jud Connors, a successful writer, is found murdered in his isolated cabin in the Oregon woods, his daughter Abby sees her world start to fall apart. Who could have wanted her father dead? And why? More puzzling is how anyone could have gotten to the cabin undetected. Was the murderer someone Jud knew?

As Abby embarks on her own investigation, she soon realizes that the clue to the murderer's identity is buried in her father's latest novel, finished just weeks before his death. But will she be able to see through the fiction before the killer comes after her?

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    • AudioFile Magazine
      The murder of a parent is not easy to deal with. When your father is a novelist and you believe that the murder was not a random act but tied somehow to his current work in progress, what choice do you have but to dig into the manuscript to figure it out? Marguerite Gavin sets a brisk pace with her no-nonsense narrative style. Although Gavin does not develop unique voices for her characters for the most part, she differentiates them enough to make the dialogue easy to follow. Using a CD player on the computer with the free download MP3 software is not ideal, but it gets the job done and helps to make this format accessible to a wider range of listeners. J.E.M. (c) AudioFile 2002, Portland, Maine
    • Publisher's Weekly

      October 2, 2000
      Set in and around her own Eugene, Ore., prolific Wilhelm's latest tale (after The Good Children) of psychological suspense reinforces the solid reputation she's earned for her 40-odd books published since 1963. Abby Connors is mourning the death of her father, bestselling novelist Jud Vickers, at the age of 48. Jud was a womanizing former ne'er-do-well who had recently found success, only to be murdered at his remote lakefront cabin. The local police baffled, Abby soon finds herself doing her own sleuthing, much to the dismay of her husband, Brice, a financial planner who was always jealous of Jud's primary place in Abby's heart. As Abby investigates further, she discovers secrets in Jud's past as well as an unfinished novel. Aware that Jud always based characters and events on people he actually knew, Abby begins to wonder: does the identity of the murderer and the motive lie within those unpublished pages? The brief forays into Jud's novel within the novel are sometimes over-the-top, and some readers may feel cheated by the subtle, nonconfrontational climax. The star of the book, strangely, is the cabin itself, a perversely menacing version of a Thomas Kincade painting and a deliciously eerie setting for the mystery and murder, beckoning the reader to step inside. Then, too, Abby is a plucky heroine whose steely patience serves her well even amid grief and bewilderment. Meanwhile, the ever-present specter of the murderer--casting doubt on the behavior of everyone Abby has contact with--keeps the edginess quotient high.

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  • OverDrive Listen audiobook

Languages

  • English

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