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Things aren’t going well with the Wrights’ marriage.
When Amelia wins a weekend away to Scotland, she convinces her husband to come in hopes the time together will jump-start their relationship. Adam is a workaholic screenwriter who has found success in adapting novels for film. What he really wants is to see his own original screenplay made into a movie, but that has yet to happen. He has lived with face blindness his whole life, so that makes his life a little unusual; he’s always needed his wife’s help in identifying people when they are in groups.
While Amelia is intrigued by the idea of staying in an old chapel turned into a home, Adam is not at all interested in driving for hours in the snow from London to Scotland. But he goes. And when they arrive, both are dismayed by the complete isolation of the old building. It’s even locked when they first arrive. And things just get weirder from there. It starts becoming clear that they were brought to the place for a reason. And that both Wrights are keeping secrets.
I can’t really say a lot more because it would ruin the plot. This thriller book has a nice twisty story and I stayed busy trying to get ahead of it. It’s interesting and definitely kept me reading.
Rated: Moderate. Profanity includes 2 uses of strong language, about 10 instances of moderate profanity, and a few uses of mild language. Sexual content includes some kissing and references to married couples having sex but not a lot of details. There are some references to affairs. Violence includes some peril and several deaths.
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