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Here and Gone

A Novel

ebook
2 of 2 copies available
2 of 2 copies available
Here and Gone is a gripping, wonderfully tense suspense thriller about a mother's desperate fight to recover her stolen children from corrupt authorities.. It begins with a woman fleeing through Arizona with her kids in tow, trying to escape an abusive marriage. When she's pulled over by an unsettling local sheriff, things soon go awry and she is taken into custody. Only when she gets to the station, her kids are gone. And then the cops start saying they never saw any kids with her, that if they're gone than she must have done something with them... Meanwhile, halfway across the country a man hears the frenzied news reports about the missing kids, which are eerily similar to events in his own past. As the clock ticks down on the search for the lost children, he too is drawn into the desperate fight for their return.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      April 17, 2017
      Audra Kinney, the heroine of this suspenseful but deeply disturbing thriller from Beck (the pseudonym of Irish author Stuart Neville), is fleeing from New York to California with her two kids to prevent her abusive ex from getting custody. One minute Audra is submitting to what seems a routine traffic stop in an Arizona backwater, the next she’s in a cell facing charges of marijuana possession with intent to distribute, 10-year-old Sean and six-year-old Louise have disappeared, and Sheriff Ronald Whiteside insists that no children were in the car when he pulled her over. When the story hits the media, the only person who credits Audra’s frantic claims that the last she saw of her kids was Whiteside’s ordering a deputy to drive them away to “somewhere safe” is a stranger, San Francisco gang member Danny “Knife Boy” Lee—because he’s convinced something similar happened to his wife and daughter five years earlier. The narrative drive more than compensates for sometimes inconsistent and less-than-convincing characters, though Audra and her children’s plight may upset some readers. Agent: Nat Sobel, Sobel Weber Associates.

    • Kirkus

      April 15, 2017
      Audra Kinney confronts every parent's worst nightmare when she and her children become the victims of corrupt and scheming cops in the first novel by Beck, a pseudonym for Northern Irish crime writer Stuart Neville (So Say the Fallen, 2016, etc.).After years of abuse, Audra works up the courage to take her two children and leave her husband, but 18 months later, she doesn't have much of a long-term plan. When her friend casually invites her out to San Diego, she packs up the car and heads west. In the middle of the Arizona desert, a small-town sheriff finds an excuse to pull her over, arrest her, and separate her from her children. Soon Audra is headline news, and the cop's story that she wasn't traveling with children, that she must be crazy or even homicidal, becomes the accepted narrative. In San Francisco, however, a young man named Danny Lee hears about what is happening and decides to fly down to Arizona. Several years ago, Danny's wife had a similar experience, and they never found their child--and his wife never recovered. Only Danny and FBI agent Jennifer Mitchell can help Audra uncover the truth behind the sheriff's cruel plan and save her children. The premise is undoubtedly chilling--almost too much so, making it difficult to enjoy the book as "entertainment." The characters, though somewhat interesting, are hard to relate to, and the short, choppy chapters, a common bestseller structure, do little to build suspense. There should have been more to say about the victimization of women by the media, or the horrors of human trafficking, but the moral complexity of the main characters somehow carries little resonance. The villains are too unequivocally evil. In the end, beyond the nerve-wracking premise, there just aren't enough surprises.

      COPYRIGHT(2017) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Booklist

      Starred review from April 15, 2017
      Good news. Here's the perfect handoff for fans desperate for something like Lee Child, Harlan Coben, and Lisa Gardner. Haylen Beck is the pseudonym of acclaimed Irish crime writer Stuart Neville. In this remarkable piece of suspense, he leaves his top-notch series characters in their Belfast haunts and puts Audra Kinney behind the wheel of an aged station wagon on the run with her two children, desperate to leave an abusive husband and a troubled past in New York. California, here we come! Well, not quite. Audra gets pulled over somewhere in Arizona by one of those unsettling sheriff types and is taken into custody. When she gets to the station, her kids are not there, and she becomes the prime suspect in their disappearance. The collusive deputies claim they never saw any kids. In the ensuing media frenzy, Danny Lee, a Jack Reacherlike figure, recognizes an eerie similarity to events in his own past and is determined that these children be found. It is a desperate fight. How desperate? When Audra, determined not to waste her shot, finally gets the chance, her son has to say, Mom, stop. If there were such a thing as the Misused Mother of the Year Award, this woman with her throat burned raw from screaming would be a prime candidate. Don't be surprised if this one becomes the thriller everybody is reading this summer.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2017, American Library Association.)

    • Publisher's Weekly

      July 31, 2017
      This new novel by Beck (a pen name of Irish crime novelist Stuart Neville) begins with Audra Kinney on the run with her two children, escaping an abusive husband and monstrous mother-in-law. While driving through Arizona, she gets pulled over by local sheriff Bob Whiteside, for what seems like a routine traffic stop. He arrests her on a fake drugs charge, knocks her around in a cell, and tries to convince her that she was alone when arrested. When the media get wind of the case, Whiteside easily manipulates them into demonizing Audra as a crazy person who’s killed her children and hidden their bodies. The soft-spoken, ultracool Danny Lee, an ex–hit man for a San Francisco tong whose late wife suffered a fate very similar to Audra’s, is a frighteningly self-contained good-bad guy who gives both Audra and this riveting thriller new hope for justice. The novel is rife with highly emotional moments, and actor-narrator Craden performs them with full intensity, matching Beck’s descriptions of Audra’s overwhelming unhappiness and lack of self-esteem at home and her sense of empowerment leading to her breakaway. Trapped by Whiteside, she gives vent to frustration, fear, and fury. The quick-to-anger sheriff is full of smarmy good-ole-boy charm (with an accent to match) when dealing with the press, but there are moments when he can’t keep his self-loathing under wraps. A Crown hardcover.

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