Fülszöveg
"A PLAYFUL, PSYCHOLOGICAL CHESS GAME CUM MYSTERY
STREWN WITH CLUES, RED HERRINGS, FALSE STARTS, AND
SUSPENSE." —San Francisco Examiner-Chronicle
Guilt is San Francisco psychologist Joel
Abramowitz's business-and it is his second feelina
after lovely, very rich Margot, his best friend's wife
confesses she loves him. His first feeling is
unabashed lust. But the next morning the lady
vanishes, and then an overweight, wildly jealous
patient appears at Joel s office to confess she
forced Margot's car off the road. Is it the client's
fantasy or is Margot dead? A twisted skein of love
murder, and compulsion soon leads Joel
' Abramowitz on a frantic womanhunt through
California's mad. mad world. And he certainly has
his hands full, dealing with "issues" and outright
lunacy—and fearing what may reside in the
shadowlands of his own desperate heart.
"DONisIA LEVIN IS ONE OF THE IMPORTANT NEW NOVELISTS
\ COMING OF AGE IN CALIFORNIA."
V —Dianne Feinstein
i
\ -
"A...
Tovább
Fülszöveg
"A PLAYFUL, PSYCHOLOGICAL CHESS GAME CUM MYSTERY
STREWN WITH CLUES, RED HERRINGS, FALSE STARTS, AND
SUSPENSE." —San Francisco Examiner-Chronicle
Guilt is San Francisco psychologist Joel
Abramowitz's business-and it is his second feelina
after lovely, very rich Margot, his best friend's wife
confesses she loves him. His first feeling is
unabashed lust. But the next morning the lady
vanishes, and then an overweight, wildly jealous
patient appears at Joel s office to confess she
forced Margot's car off the road. Is it the client's
fantasy or is Margot dead? A twisted skein of love
murder, and compulsion soon leads Joel
' Abramowitz on a frantic womanhunt through
California's mad. mad world. And he certainly has
his hands full, dealing with "issues" and outright
lunacy—and fearing what may reside in the
shadowlands of his own desperate heart.
"DONisIA LEVIN IS ONE OF THE IMPORTANT NEW NOVELISTS
\ COMING OF AGE IN CALIFORNIA."
V —Dianne Feinstein
i
\ -
"A BOOK YOU WONT WANT TO PUT DOWN
The writing is clever and fun. the characters are quirky
—The West Coast Review of Books
Vissza