Paranoid [text (large print)]/ Lisa Jackson

By: Jackson, Lisa [author]Material type: TextTextPublisher: Thorndike, Maine : Center Point Large Print, [2019]Edition: Center Point Large Print editionDescription: 607 pages (large print) ; 23 cmContent type: text Media type: unmediated Carrier type: volumeISBN: 9781643582825; 1643582828Subject(s): Manslaughter -- Fiction | Large type books | Accidents -- Fiction | Brothers -- Death -- Fiction | Stalking victims -- Fiction | Paranoia -- Fiction | Guilt -- Fiction | Oregon -- FictionGenre/Form: Large type books DDC classification: 813/.54 Summary: "Some people in Rachel Gaston's small hometown of Edgewater, Oregon, think she got away with murder twenty years ago when she mistook a real gun for a toy. As that deadly anniversary approaches, she'll need to find the truth ... before it finds her"-- Provided by publisherSummary: There are people in Edgewater, Oregon, who think that Rachel Gaston got away with murder when she shot and killed her brother in a teenage game. That was twenty years ago, and Rachel is moving on, trying to put the guilt of what happened behind her. On the anniversary of her brother's death she receives a text message: I forgive you. Then she begins receiving midnight phone calls from a blocked number. Are these happenings malicious? Genuinely forgiving? Or is Rachel just being paranoid? -- adapted from back cover
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Item type Home library Call number Status Date due Barcode
Book A J M Library 868-5076
JACK (Browse shelf) Available 51712

Regular print version previously published by: Kensington Publishing Corp

"Some people in Rachel Gaston's small hometown of Edgewater, Oregon, think she got away with murder twenty years ago when she mistook a real gun for a toy. As that deadly anniversary approaches, she'll need to find the truth ... before it finds her"-- Provided by publisher

There are people in Edgewater, Oregon, who think that Rachel Gaston got away with murder when she shot and killed her brother in a teenage game. That was twenty years ago, and Rachel is moving on, trying to put the guilt of what happened behind her. On the anniversary of her brother's death she receives a text message: I forgive you. Then she begins receiving midnight phone calls from a blocked number. Are these happenings malicious? Genuinely forgiving? Or is Rachel just being paranoid? -- adapted from back cover

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