Faces of Fear by John Saul

BUY IT USED from UniversalAthenaeum

Ships from: Denver, CO

Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Use Express Domestic to make sure this item arrives by Dec. 24

Shipping Options:

  • Standard Domestic
  • Express Domestic
  • Canadian
  • International

BUY IT NEW



  • $26.00 List price
  • $24.70 Online price(Save 5%)
  • $22.23 Member price
  • Join Now
  • Buy it new

    (Hardcover)

    Details from Seller

    • ISBN: 0345487052
    • Publisher: Random House Publishing Group
    • Pub. Date: August 2008
    • Condition:

    Comments from the Seller: 2008 Hardcover Good Used item may show library stamps, stickers and marks. Buy with confidence-your satisfaction is guaranteed at B-Logistics! Due to the large scale of our operation, we do not have access to the specific contents/condition of our items. Please note that Expedited shipping is not available at this time.

    About the Seller

     
    • Overview
    • Editorial Reviews
    • Customer Reviews
    • Features
    • Full Product Details

    Synopsis

    Fifteen-year old Allison Shaw may not be beautiful, but she doesn’t really care. She is happier hanging with her friends and playing sports than admiring herself in a mirror. But when her mother, Risa, marries the premier plastic surgeon Conrad Dunn, he moves them from Santa Monica to his enormous home in exclusive Bel Air.

    Everywhere Allison and her mother look beautiful people have benefited from Conrad’s skillful knife. With her new friends’ encouragement, Allison and her mother reluctantly agree to her sweet sixteen-gift from Conrad: breast implants.

    Risa begins to realize Conrad’s obsession with his deceased wife. She discovers not only his fixation with the beautiful dead Margot, but other dark, murky secrets begin to surface, as well, pointing to a more sinister agenda. What else does he have in mind for her daughter? Is it too late to save Allison from the scalpel of her ever so charming husband?

    Publishers Weekly

    Beverly Hills plastic surgeon Conrad Dunn has put his talents to work making his wife, Margot, the embodiment of physical perfection, but after her face is scarred in a boating accident, Margot takes her own life in this less than suspenseful thriller from bestseller Saul (The Devil's Labyrinth).A Remarrying within a year, Dunn persuades his new teenage stepdaughter, Alison Shaw, who's struggling to adjust to life in the Dunn mansion and to a private school with a ridiculously affluent student body, to undergo breast-enhancement surgery. Meanwhile, the police are searching frantically for the Frankenstein Killer, a serial slayer who removes his female victims' glands as well as more obvious body parts.A The motive for the killings and the eventual outcome will surprise few readers.A The basic premise has a plot hole big enough to fit a truck, but Saul fans may not notice or care if they do. (Aug.)

    Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

    More Reviews and Recommendations

    Biography

    House of Reckoning is John Saul’s thirty-sixth novel. His first novel, Suffer the Children, published in 1977, was an immediate million-copy bestseller. His other bestselling suspense novels include In the Dark of the Night, Perfect Nightmare, Black Creek Crossing, Midnight Voices, The Manhattan Hunt Club, The Right Hand of Evil, Guardian, and Faces of Fear. Saul divides his time between Seattle, Washington, and Hawaii.

    Customer Reviews

    Not Great, But Not Badby emmi331

    Reader Rating:
    See Detailed Ratings

    07/17/2009: Face it - John Saul doesn't pretend to be John Steinbeck. His writing, at least in this book, is pretty pedestrian. The plot is often transparent, and so are the characters, who don't deserve even the usual comparison to cardboard. But that's not the point, and I give it a solid four stars because the author does the job he's supposed to do, which is to keep the reader turning the pages. His variation on the mad doctor tale is pretty decent. I also appreciated the subtext about our culture's preoccupation with youth and beauty at any price. Though it isn't Saul's best (at times it reads like he phoned it in) it probably isn't his worst either. It's fine for a quick and entertaining read.

    I Also Recommend: Cheating at Solitaire (Gregor Demarkian Series #23), Tan Lines, In the Dark of the Night, Black Creek Crossing.

    Predictableby Lindsie

    Reader Rating:
    See Detailed Ratings

    12/03/2008: I like John Sauls books and have read mnay of them. The idea around this novel was good which is why I picked it up, but it was very predictable. You know who the killer is halfway through the book and its no surprise. The characters were good, I liked Alison, Micheal and Scott. Risa on the other hand was a total BORE. Who lets their daughter just get implants? Better yet what kind of mother suggests that her 16! year old daughter get them! Thats totally unrealistic. And the fact that she just died in the end was rediculous too. Think about who you marry before you do so. Woman should know if a man had JUST lost his wife there are going to be some emotional paths in which they need to go down before finding someone else and marrying them in less than a year.

    Saul fans should read, but its just so predictable.. Overall a good book tho if you didnt figure out the ending before you got there.


    More Customer Reviews