Category Archives: Amy Lloyd

Review: One More Lie by Amy Lloyd

Title: One More Lie by Amy Lloyd
Publisher: Hanover Square Press
Genre: Contemporary, Mystery, Suspense
Length: 336 pages
Book Rating: B

Complimentary Review Copy Provided by Publisher Through NetGalley

Summary:

Charlotte wants to start fresh. She wants to forget her past, forget prison and, most of all, forget Sean. But old habits die hard. Despite the ankle monitor she must wear as part of her parole agreement and frequent visits to her therapist, she soon finds herself sliding back toward the type of behavior that sent her to prison in the first place. The further down that path she goes, however, the closer she gets to the crime that put her in prison all those years ago. And that’s the one memory she can’t face. Until, one day, Sean tracks her down.

Amy Lloyd, the internationally bestselling and award-winning author of The Innocent Wife, returns with a chilling portrait of a woman trying to be good, even when she isn’t sure she wants to be.

Review:

One More Lie by Amy Lloyd is a suspenseful, character-driven mystery.

Charlotte Donaldson is on parole again and this time, she wants to make sure she does not endanger her freedom. Living in a halfway house and wearing an ankle monitor, she is uneasy in social situations. Due to her long time in institutions, Charlotte does not do well without a strict, regimented schedule. Despite her anxiety, she begins her new job and continues seeing her therapist, Dr. Evelyn Isherwood. The one thing Charlotte longs for and fears in equal measure is contact with her childhood friend, Sean. And when he does finally reach out to her, she begins a downward spiral that ends where all of her problems began. What will she do when the memories she has repressed for so long begin to surface? Is Charlotte prepared for the truth about the long buried truth about what happened when she was a child?

Charlotte is a mess pretty much as soon as she is reintegrates into society. She is awkward in social settings and she has no idea what the proper reaction is for many of the situations she finds herself in.  Reconnecting with Sean feeds into the stress she is experiencing and Charlotte makes a fateful decision that puts her on a collision course with disaster.

Sean is also out of prison again and he is not exactly living on the straight and narrow.  He cannot resist trying to locate Charlotte again and he will go to any lengths to find her.  Sean encourages her worst instincts but even he could not have predicted her reaction to the information she uncovers.

Weaving seamlessly back and forth in time, One More Lie is an absolutely addictive read that is impossible to put down.  The characters are well-developed with more than fair share of troubles. Charlotte is a sympathetic character as she tries to find her footing outside of an institution. Sean is quite flawed and his choices make it difficult to like him. The storyline is compelling and Amy Lloyd’s gradually parceling of the truth about Charlotte will keep readers on the edge of their seats until the novel’s shocking conclusion. A fantastic mystery that readers of the genre do not want to miss.

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Filed under Amy Lloyd, Contemporary, Hanover Square Press, Mystery, One More Lie, Rated B, Review, Suspense

Review: The Innocent Wife by Amy Lloyd

Title: The Innocent Wife by Amy Lloyd
Publisher: Hanover Square Press
Genre: Contemporary, Mystery, Suspense
Length: 320 pages
Book Rating: B+

Complimentary Review Copy Provided by Publisher Through NetGalley

Summary:

You Love Him. You Trust Him. So Why Are You So Scared?

Twenty years ago, Dennis Danson was arrested and imprisoned for the brutal murder of a young girl. Now he’s the subject of a true-crime documentary that’s whipping up a frenzy online to uncover the truth and free a man who has been wrongly convicted.

A thousand miles away in England, Samantha is obsessed with Dennis’s case. She exchanges letters with him, and is quickly won over by his apparent charm and kindness to her. Soon she has left her old life behind to marry him and campaign for his release.

When the campaign is successful and Dennis is freed, however, Sam begins to discover new details that suggest he may not be quite so innocent after all.

But how do you confront your husband when you don’t want to know the truth?

The winner of the Daily Mail First Novel Competition, Amy Lloyd’s The Innocent Wife is gripping psychological suspense from a brilliant new voice in crime fiction.

Review:

The Innocent Wife by Amy Lloyd is a suspenseful character study of a women who becomes obsessed with then marries a convicted killer who is on death row.

In her thirties, Samantha is a British schoolteacher who is reeling from a bad breakup when she becomes fixated on death row inmate Dennis Danson. After watching an earlier documentary which highlights inconsistencies in his original conviction,  she becomes his penpal and their letters quickly jump into romantic territory. After months of writing back and forth Sam decides to travel to Florida to meet Dennis and participate in the filming of the latest documentary extolling his innocence.  After her arrival, things move quickly once Dennis proposes to her and they marry while he is still in prison. Dennis is then exonerated and Sam is now living with a husband she barely knows and soon wonders if she can trust.

Sam is insecure with low self esteem which probably explains how easily she becomes devoted to Dennis.  Life in the United States is definitely out her comfort zone but she stands by the choices she makes once she arrives.  Sam blindly follows her new husband as he makes the rounds granting interviews on TV, newspapers and magazines. After his father dies, Dennis and Sam return to Red River County, FL to make burial arrangements and put his affairs in order.

Sam’s marriage to Dennis does not exactly proceed the way she imagined but she is committed to him. She excuses some of his idiosyncrasies but she cannot help but wonder about the reasons behind some of his decisions. Dennis is definitely charming and initially seems quite taken with her but soon after their arrival in Red River County, Sam begins to see a different side to her husband. However, she continues to overlook these troubling aspects of his personality but doubts do gradually begin to creep in the longer they spend at his family home.

The Innocent Wife is a fast-paced and engrossing novel with a compelling storyline. While Sam is not exactly the most likable character, her choices do reflect her personality and lack of self-worth. The cracks in Dennis’s facade appear fairly quickly and a lot of his behavior is sinister enough to question events in both his past and present.  Amy Lloyd does an absolutely brilliant job keeping the truth about Dennis closely under wraps until the novel’s tension-filled conclusion.

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Filed under Amy Lloyd, Contemporary, Hanover Square Press, Mystery, Rated B+, Review, Suspense, The Innocent Wife