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About Face
About Face
About Face
Audiobook12 hours

About Face

Written by Fern Michaels

Narrated by Lauren Ezzo

Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars

3.5/5

()

About this audiobook

When Dr. Blake Hunter discovers Casey Edwards wandering along a Sweetwater, Georgia, road, she’s a woman without a past, her memory stripped of the terrifying events that shattered her innocence a decade ago. The scrap of paper she clutches in her hand bears the address to Swan House, the magnificent mansion where Casey’s mother lives with her mysteriously ailing husband. But “home” turns out to be anything but a safe haven.…

Casey is determined to untangle the web of secrets that surround her. The answers lay somewhere within Swan House and its lavish gardens but someone wants Casey out of the way before she remembers too much. It will take the strength she’s always had—and the love she’s just found—to uncover her past and claim her future.…

LanguageEnglish
Release dateJul 28, 2015
ISBN9781501234088
About Face
Author

Fern Michaels

Fern Michaels is the USA Today and New York Times bestselling author of the Sisterhood, Men of the Sisterhood and Godmothers series, as well as dozens of other novels and novellas. There are over seventy-five million copies of her books in print. Fern Michaels has built and funded several large day-care centers in her hometown, and is a passionate animal lover who has outfitted police dogs across the country with special bulletproof vests. She shares her home in South Carolina with her four dogs and a resident ghost named Mary Margaret.

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Reviews for About Face

Rating: 3.6555555644444446 out of 5 stars
3.5/5

45 ratings2 reviews

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  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    This is the story of Casey and her years of struggle and strife. This is so different from the Fern Michaels books that I know and love. I have read 60+ books she has written over the years and have devoured each one. This particular book is dark and depressing and it was a struggle to complete it. There is a happy ending but there is so much sadness to get there. I'm not sure I would recommend this book.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    I have read most of Fern Michaels books, and, believe me, this is unlike the others. This is the story of Casey Edwards. At the start, Casey, who suffers from long-term amnesia, has just been released from a mental institution/hospital, where she has been a patient for the past ten years. She returns to Swan House, where her mother and her stepfather live. Casey begins a journey to regain her memory and to figure out what happened ten years before to send her to the mental hospital. The story is very intense, but lacks the action we see in so many books. I am not one for books filled with lots of introspection, as well as long sections devoted to minor characters and incidents that have little bearing on the basic plot. I guess that is why I concluded this one dragged a lot, had difficulty holding my interest and is not one of the author’s best. Casey befriends the town doctor, Blake, who seems to be the only one who genuinely cares about her or who is willing to help her in her quest to regain the lost years of her life. I found it interesting and somewhat unbelievable the way this small town rejected Casey, since small towns generally embrace citizens. This was all because of her earlier condemnation for fratricide. There was little or no discussion about this in the early half of the book, though I kept waiting for some explanations, to see where this book was going. I think the author dragged things out before beginning the revelations a bit too much. In fact, had the book been written more “tightly”, it could easily have been quite a bit shorter and still would not have missed much of the story. This book will be released later this month, but, based on what I can see from reviews, appears to be a re-release of an earlier book. Since it is so unlike any other Fern Michaels books I have read, this may be why it was so unlike the books by her that I have read. This may be a book written by a younger, less experienced writer, who has now matured in her writing skills. The story is complex and does require that the author go into detail about the past to fully understand the plot, but, as I said, I think it could have been done better. I will move on the next Fern Michaels book, mostly because I like her books and have not found any others I really did not like. I think this book will be of interest to anyone who enjoys books that delve into the mysteries and problems of abuse, victims and the effects the abuse has on lives, though, as I have said, this is not the best book dealing with the subject that I have read or one of Fern Michaels best books. I received this from NetGalley to read and review.