New York Times bestselling and award-winning author Joy Fielding tells the story of an ambitious journalist whose foray into the mind of a killer puts her own family in jeopardy. Charley Webb is a... This description may be from another edition of this product.
Joy Fielding can grab your attention from page one and keep you interested until the end. You will admire the main character Charley who is a writer and unmarried mother of two who struggles with family, work and love and manages to get manipulated by an imprisoned child murderer. Could not put it down!
pleasantly surprised
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 16 years ago
After a series of books that weren't very good (Lost, Puppet, Heartstopper) I wasn't expecting much from this one. I read this book in one day - it was very entertaining. I think it's her best book since Whispers & Lies. I liked the main character. I didn't think it would happen, but I'm glad she finally wrote about a character who had a great relationship with her kids. I wish the book was a little bit longer - I wanted to read more about Charley's father and sisters. Joy Fielding has been one of my favorite authors for many years. I'm so happy she still continues to write good books. I'm looking forward to the next book.
NOT a typical woman in peril book
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 17 years ago
If you think you understand what's going on in this book, if you think you know who's good or who's bad...think again. The fascinating story line is just the beginning of the richness of this book. As an avid reader, I usually have a good idea of who-done-it but this book took me by surprise. Don't expect this to be a book you can put down. I couldn't go to sleep until I had finished it.
Thoroughly entertaining
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 17 years ago
Palm Beach Post columnist Charlotte (Charley) Webb frequently gets fan mail, and occasionally hate mail, usually just from an offended subscriber with an urge to vent. But most of the hate mail does not get up close and personal, at least not to the point of threatening Charley's children. Of course, any of her astute readers knows she has children because she writes about all sorts of life's experiences, including her kids' antics, in her column. And now one of those astute readers has threatened them. Single mother of two, sister to three, disowned daughter of a self-proclaimed bitter old man and recently reclaimed child of a runaway mom, Charley has a host of family issues to deal with. Real whoppers. But her children -- Franny, her serious eight-year-old daughter, and James, her younger, more artistic son --- mean everything to her. Maybe because of her dysfunctional background or because she just loves them with her whole heart; whatever the reason, any hint of danger surrounding the two sends Charley into a panic. While her life is pretty full lately, Charley has been going through a dry spell when it comes to men. That's okay, though, because she's not sure she's all that successful in the relationship arena. In fact, she's not sure she's successful at a lot of things: being a good friend (she has none), or neighbor (she annoys hers), or co-worker (she doesn't talk to them). She's convinced, though, that she excels in her parenting skills. Everything seems to be going along fine (considering) until Charley gets a letter from convicted child killer Jill Rohmer. The letter proposes that Charley write a book revealing the true story behind the murders. What writer could resist such an offer? Certainly not Charley. Visions of fame and fortune cloud her judgment, and she takes a trip out to the prison to interview Jill. Meeting the killer face to face is unsettling, but Charley becomes intrigued. She makes another trip, and then another; their meetings become a weekly ritual. As the story unfolds slowly, Jill begins to hint at an accomplice in the killings. Alex Prescott, Jill's attorney, accompanies Charley on several visits, despite his apparent lack of enthusiasm for the book project. Charley tries to stay objective, but it's been a while since she's had a beau. Alex looks pretty good, especially to a pretty, thirtysomething woman in want of at least companionship, if not more. Soon, Charley is in the midst of high drama, a budding relationship and guilt at the growing fracture in her family. Listening to a heartless murderer of three innocent children makes Charley hypersensitive to her own kids, and memories of her own childhood make her want more for Franny and James. But the threats keep coming and Charley doesn't know who to trust. She turns to a friend for help because she fears Jill's accomplice may have his own agenda. And he does. Indeed, he does. Part romance, part mystery and thoroughly entertaining, CHARLEY'S WEB by
Excellent - Superb - 5 stars
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 17 years ago
I read thrillers and suspense novels all year every year and rarely am lucky enough to come across a 5-star one, but Charley's Web is one of those. I couldn't put it down. Highly recommended.
Fielding has done it again
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 17 years ago
And now I have to wait another whole year for her "latest." I finished CHARLEY'S WEB earlier this afternoon, and my heart is still beating fast. The author is a master at creating credible psychological suspense. Fielding's characters are flawed -- I didn't particularly admire Charley, certainly did not like her long-lost/recently found mother, etc., but as usual I could not put the book down. Fielding's characters STAY with you, and even if the mystery wanes, one is drawn to the characters. Suspense is the name of her game, and no one can build it, and certainly end it, like Joy Fielding.
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