I Heard That Song Before by Mary Higgins Clark

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(Mass Market Paperback - Reprint)

Reader Rating: (36 ratings)

Detailed Rating: "Writing Style" See All

  • Publisher: Simon & Schuster Adult Publishing Group
  • Pub. Date: February 2008
  • ISBN-13: 9780743497305
  • Sales Rank: 3,439
  • 416pp
  • Edition Description: Reprint
 
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Synopsis

In a riveting psychological thriller, Mary Higgins Clark takes the reader deep into the mysteries of the human mind, where memories may be the most dangerous things of all.

At the center of her novel is Kay Lansing, who has grown up in Englewood, New Jersey, daughter of the landscaper to the wealthy and powerful Carrington family. Their mansion -- a historic seventeenth-century manor house transported stone by stone from Wales in 1848 -- has a hidden chapel. One day, accompanying her father to work, six-year-old Kay succumbs to curiosity and sneaks into the chapel. There, she overhears a quarrel between a man and a woman who is demanding money from him. When she says that this will be the last time, his caustic response is: "I heard that song before."

That same evening, the Carringtons hold a formal dinner dance after which Peter Carrington, a student at Princeton, drives home Susan Althorp, the nineteen-year-old daughter of neighbors. While her parents hear her come in, she is not in her room the next morning and is never seen or heard from again.

Throughout the years, a cloud of suspicion hangs over Peter Carrington. At age forty-two, head of the family business empire, he is still "a person of interest" in the eyes of the police, not only for Susan Althorp's disappearance but also for the subsequent drowning death of his own pregnant wife in their swimming pool.

Kay Lansing, now living in New York and working as a librarian in Englewood, goes to see Peter Carrington to ask for permission to hold a cocktail party on his estate to benefit a literacy program, which he later grants. Kay comes to see Peter as maligned and misunderstood, and when he begins to court her after the cocktail party, she falls in love with him. Over the objections of her beloved grandmother Margaret O'Neil, who raised her after her parents' early deaths, she marries him. To her dismay, she soon finds that he is a sleepwalker whose nocturnal wanderings draw him to the spot at the pool where his wife met her end.

Publishers Weekly

At the start of bestseller Clark's riveting new novel of suspense, Kay Lansing recalls her first visit as a six-year-old to the Carrington estate in Englewood, N.J., where her father worked as a landscaper. Twenty-two years later, she returns to ask the present owner, Peter Carrington, if she can use the mansion for a fund-raiser. The two fall madly in love, and after a whirlwind courtship, they marry despite the shadow of suspicion that hangs over Peter regarding the death of a neighbor's daughter two decades earlier and the drowning of his first wife four years before. After an idyllic honeymoon, the couple return to New Jersey, where a magazine article has caused the police to reopen the cases. The subsequent discovery of two bodies buried on the estate causes even Kay to doubt her husband's innocence. Clark (Two Little Girls in Blue) deftly keeps the finger of guilt pointed in many directions until the surprising conclusion. (Apr.)

Copyright 2007 Reed Business Information

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Biography

Mary Higgins Clark likes to delve into different worlds in her crackerjack novels of suspense; but while the milieus change, her stories are always compelling. As she puts it: "I write about people going about their daily lives, not looking for trouble, who are suddenly plunged into menacing situations."

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Customer Reviews

NOT A BAD READby Anonymous

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November 03, 2008: A first book that I have read by her. I normally dont often go astray from the few usual authors that I pretty much only read their works, but while at Barnes I wanted something different and after reading this book I was glad I decided to pick it up. A well written story from the first page to the very end, was a hard book to put down. Loved the characters, and was fooled abit thinking that the real protagonist of the story would be the antagonist, needless to say I was shocked with the ending of the book. I may check out a few other books of hers. Not a bad read overall.

I Also Recommend: A Breath of Snow and Ashes, Love Returns Through The Portal Of Time.

Good reading.by elena1952

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October 30, 2008: This book kept my interest, and was very enjoyable. Could not figure out who was the guilty one, till the very end.


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