A New York socialite is stripped of her luxuries, but finds that without her former decadence it is easier to hide from those who are out to get her. This description may be from another edition of this product.
As a lot of us know, people can do anything in the face of adversity. This is something Kealy and her children discovered immediately following the death of their husband and father. Readers are taken inside the world of the rich and famous, and then are abruptly tossed on the other side of the tracks along with the main characters of this intriguing book. The people you think can trust, you can't. And the ones you think you can't trust, you should. Kealy learns how to follow her own instincts, as well as those of her children as they unite as a family determined to reclaim their lives. I especially enjoyed the surprise ending.
Exciting and not ordinary!
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 17 years ago
This book provides a thrilling ride across New York. I could not put it down! The author is new to me but I intend to read more of her work. What I enjoyed most was that the ending and plot were not predictable. Kealy Ryerson is not sure who she can trust after her husband calls and insists she run for her life and that she do it NOW! This middle-aged woman finds strengths she did not know she had.
Not quite sure......
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 19 years ago
I just finished reading this book and I'm still not quite sure whether it deserves a 3 or 4 star rating. I rushed through, turning pages because I wanted to see what happened. I liked the characters and I thought on a whole, the premise of the book was a great thrill ride. Now, here is what I found wrong with it. I felt it ended too quickly without a good explanation of what and who was involved, and I just found the converstions, the situations, a little too "scripted". I know, it is a book, a novel, but do people really talk like these people talked? Maybe....who knows...it just felt forced in so many places. Again, I am really on the fence but on the whole I liked the story, and I would pick up another book by this author.
Assured, compelling, and full of promise
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 19 years ago
If you were to look up the definition of "New York socialite" in the dictionary, one gets the feeling you would find Kealy Ryerson's picture beside it. Born into a wealthy family, Kealy is married to James Ryerson, a wildly successful if improbably principled defense attorney; has two children enrolled in private schools; and a maid to clean up after her on a daily basis. On the cusp of middle age, she is able to afford the surgical touch-ups and carefully applied cosmetics that let her rage against the dimming, if not dying, of the light. Her life and accruements vanish from her in the space of a few short minutes. She receives a terse telephone call from her husband, telling her in no uncertain terms to gather up their children and leave the country. Minutes later, he is dead, and Kealy is on her own, and on the run, in ways she never could have imagined. So begins AN INVISIBLE WOMAN, Anne Strieber's debut novel. This is an incredibly ambitious work, though Strieber's reach occasionally exceeds her grasp. There are a few problems here. The pacing of this work is intermittent. Quite a bit happens at the beginning, but then the reader is left stumbling in Kealy's wake for just a bit too long as she and her children find that their avenues of escape are cut off even as they are pursued by the same shadowy assassins who have killed not only her husband but also his private investigator and a New York District attorney with whom James Ryerson was improbably having lunch. Daughter Allison, a bit too precocious for her own good, just happens to be school roomies with a streetwise black teenager named Lushawn Davis, who just happens to have a noble but shady uncle who plays a major role later on. The Davis family apartment becomes the port in the dangerous storm gathering around what is left of the Ryerson family. Kealy soon finds that not only is a group of hit men after her, but also that the entire city is looking for her, thanks to a reward being offered by the police department, whose chief is --- interestingly enough --- her ex-husband. As I indicated, AN INVISIBLE WOMAN is a complicated book, and it takes Strieber a number of pages to set up the events. But don't dash yet; once things are in place, this tale becomes quite interesting indeed. Kealy finds herself hiding in the middle of a marginal working class neighborhood without her clothes, makeup, or any of the adornments that tell the world who she is and where she comes from. She therefore becomes nondescript, and invisible. She is able to attend her husband's funeral without any of her friends, including her ex-husband, recognizing her. She is shooed away from high-end boutiques, which she used to patronize, and is even able to infiltrate her husband's law office as a cleaning woman. Yet at the same time, while staying with the Davis family, she becomes glaringly visible, the only white woman within blocks of their humble apartment. Strieber sets up a delicious dichotomy here, wherein
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