Nowhere Girl

A Novel

Fiction & Literature, Contemporary Women, Mystery & Suspense, Thrillers
Cover of the book Nowhere Girl by Susan Strecker, St. Martin's Press
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Susan Strecker ISBN: 9781466891494
Publisher: St. Martin's Press Publication: March 1, 2016
Imprint: Thomas Dunne Books Language: English
Author: Susan Strecker
ISBN: 9781466891494
Publisher: St. Martin's Press
Publication: March 1, 2016
Imprint: Thomas Dunne Books
Language: English

In Susan Strecker's Nowhere Girl, sixteen-year-old Savannah Martino is strangled to death in an abandoned house. The police rule Savannah’s murder a random attack of opportunity, which prompts the small New Jersey town to instigate a curfew and cancel football games. Isolated and afraid, Savannah’s sister, Cady, continues to communicate with Savannah through dreams. Cady knows Savannah in ways no one else knew: The beautiful, ethereal twin everyone thought was an angel was actually on the road to self-destruction.

Years later a chance encounter while researching her latest novel coincides with an unexpected call from the once-rookie cop on Savannah’s case, Patrick Tunney, now a detective, who tells Cady that Savannah’s case has been reopened. Through new evidence, it has been determined that Savannah’s death wasn’t a random attack and that whoever killed her sister loved her.

Despite years of interviewing convicted killers, profilers, and psychiatrists for her bestselling thrillers, Cady isn’t prepared for the revelation that someone close to her could have killed her sister. Cady is drawn into a labyrinth of deception and betrayal reaching all the way back to her childhood that will force her to find the strength she never knew she had in order to face the truth.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

In Susan Strecker's Nowhere Girl, sixteen-year-old Savannah Martino is strangled to death in an abandoned house. The police rule Savannah’s murder a random attack of opportunity, which prompts the small New Jersey town to instigate a curfew and cancel football games. Isolated and afraid, Savannah’s sister, Cady, continues to communicate with Savannah through dreams. Cady knows Savannah in ways no one else knew: The beautiful, ethereal twin everyone thought was an angel was actually on the road to self-destruction.

Years later a chance encounter while researching her latest novel coincides with an unexpected call from the once-rookie cop on Savannah’s case, Patrick Tunney, now a detective, who tells Cady that Savannah’s case has been reopened. Through new evidence, it has been determined that Savannah’s death wasn’t a random attack and that whoever killed her sister loved her.

Despite years of interviewing convicted killers, profilers, and psychiatrists for her bestselling thrillers, Cady isn’t prepared for the revelation that someone close to her could have killed her sister. Cady is drawn into a labyrinth of deception and betrayal reaching all the way back to her childhood that will force her to find the strength she never knew she had in order to face the truth.

More books from St. Martin's Press

Cover of the book The Concubine's Tattoo by Susan Strecker
Cover of the book Burning Fence by Susan Strecker
Cover of the book You're So Invited by Susan Strecker
Cover of the book The Wonder Crew by Susan Strecker
Cover of the book Smoldering Hunger: Part 3 by Susan Strecker
Cover of the book Duchess of Aquitaine by Susan Strecker
Cover of the book SPQR IX: The Princess and the Pirates by Susan Strecker
Cover of the book Honk If You Love Real Men by Susan Strecker
Cover of the book On the Road to Kandahar by Susan Strecker
Cover of the book The Dance Begins by Susan Strecker
Cover of the book Hoare and the Headless Captains by Susan Strecker
Cover of the book Moving Lila by Susan Strecker
Cover of the book The Last Thousand by Susan Strecker
Cover of the book First Friends by Susan Strecker
Cover of the book Requiem for a Realtor by Susan Strecker
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy