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The Enemy at Home: Sneak Peek

Kevin O'Brien

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Kensington Books img Link Publisher

Belletristik/Erzählende Literatur

Beschreibung

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“A sweeping, addictive story of bravery and sacrifice…Authentic period detail creates a suspenseful, chilling atmosphere in this grand historical novel.” —Susan Wiggs, #1 New York Times bestselling authors


“Fast-paced, suspenseful, and intriguing... Super enjoyable” —Elizabeth George, #1 New York Times bestselling author

“Had me guessing and turning pages right up to the final, shocking reveal—which I never saw coming. A perfect summer read!”—Charlie Donlea, USA Today bestselling author

A serial killer preys on women in WWII-era Seattle in the New York Times bestselling author’s gripping new thriller—a blend of vivid, richly detailed historical fiction and taut suspense.
 
1943, Seattle. While raging war reshapes the landscape of Europe, its impact is felt thousands of miles away too. Before the war, Nora Kinney was one of countless housewives and mothers in her comfortable Capitol Hill neighborhood. Now, with her doctor husband stationed in North Africa, Nora feels compelled to do more than tend her victory garden or help with scrap metal drives . . .
 
At the Boeing B-17 plant, Nora learns to wield a heavy riveting gun amid the deafening noise of the assembly line—a real-life counterpart to “Rosie the Riveter” in the recruitment posters. Yet while the country desperately needs their help, not everyone is happy about “all these women” taking over men’s jobs. Nora worries that she is neglecting her children, especially her withdrawn teenage son. But amid this turmoil, a sinister tragedy occurs: One of Nora’s coworkers is found strangled in her apartment, dressed in an apron, with a lipstick smile smeared on her face.
 
It’s the beginning of a terrifying pattern, as women war-plant workers like Nora are targeted throughout Seattle and murdered in the same ritualistic manner. And eclipsing Nora’s fear for her safety is her secret, growing conviction that she and the killer are connected—and that the haven that was her home has become her own personal battlefield . . .

“A compulsively unputdownable, keep-you-guessing-to-the-end, pages-flying whodunit. Packed with compelling, complicated characters in a fascinating and meticulously-researched time and place.” —Laurie Frankel, New York Times bestselling author of This Is How It Always Is

“Nobody writes suspense better than Kevin O’Brien. Read The Enemy at Home, but do so with the lights on.” —Robert Dugoni, New York Times bestselling author

“The curves in the plot kept me reading late into the night (while checking the locks on my doors!).” —Erica Bauermeister, New York Times bestselling author of No Two Persons

Kundenbewertungen

Schlagwörter

army at home, historical suspense, women in the workplace, action thriller, seattle, ww2 thriller, mark sullivan, victory garden, historical novel, women war workers, rosie the riveter, historical fiction, capitol hill, Washington, ellen wiseman, ellen marie wiseman, Kristina McMorris, war fiction, war stories, boeing factory, WWII, World War II, war novel, thriller, literary fiction, historical mystery, misogyny, sexism, andrew gross, historical thriller, homefront heroines, war effort, bestselling war fiction, steve berry, world war II thriller, Diane Chamberlain, feminists, boeing plant, serial killer, alan furst, feminism, protest, war thriller