5 stars out of 5
Well, if you're looking for a wild psychological ride, you won't go wrong with this one. What a delight!At first, actually, I worried a bit; just about every chapter switches time frame, which to me is distracting (more accurately described as my aging brain has more trouble keeping things straight than it used to). But in short order - thanks to some expert writing - I was "into" it and really, really didn't want to put it down.
Gerry Andersen gained fame, considerable fortune and fancy digs in New York City after penning a best-selling novel titled Dream Girl, followed by a few other books that did relatively well. Now, at age 61, he reluctantly moved to Baltimore to care for his mother in her final stages of dementia. She died, and he had a freaky accident that left him bedridden in his apartment with almost round-the-clock caregivers who share the chores of making sure he's fed, watered and bathed. He's not happy with the arrangement (nor, for that matter, with either of the women upon whom he's dependent), but much as he'd love to head back to the Big Apple, his choices for the foreseeable future are rather limited.
The main character in his best-seller was a woman named Aubrey, and despite many pleas from fans and the media to 'fess up, he swears she's not based on a real person or persons. So when he gets a phone call from a woman who calls herself Aubrey - who tells him she's coming to see him soon - he starts to wonder if he's succumbing to the same dementia that killed his mother. That's followed by wonder about how he could protect himself if she really did show up and wanted to hurt him. Even more concerning is that there's no record that he ever received a phone call on his phone; could it be a hallucination caused by all the drugs he takes?
His caregivers aren't much help, nor is the woman he left in New York - one of the few he didn't actually marry - who's followed him to Baltimore. She's almost more of a pain than his shattered leg, but she's hard to avoid when he's trussed up like a stuffed turkey.Things really turn sour, though, when he wakes up one morning to see a dead body - one he's pretty sure wasn't there when he fell asleep the night before. One of his caregivers offers an explanation, but it's not one he wants to hear, much less believe.
From that point on, the plot gets even thicker and more fun with more than a few twists beyond what's already happened - all leading to a bang-up ending that, I must admit, left me cheering. Without doubt, this is one of the most engrossing books out of the 53 I've read so far this year - highly recommended. Kudos to the author, and many hanks very much to the publisher, via NetGalley, for the opportunity to read and review a pre-release copy.
Dream Girl by Laura Lippman (William Morrow, June 2021); 320 pp.
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