Bookbot

Mayhew Whalen Marybeth

    Marybeth Mayhew Whalen crée des histoires qui explorent les complexités de la vie des femmes, abordant des thèmes de vérité et de désir. Son écriture offre des récits accessibles qui résonnent profondément auprès des lectrices en quête de connexion et de compréhension. En tant que cofondatrice d'un site populaire de fiction féminine, elle anime activement une communauté autour d'expériences littéraires partagées. Le travail de Whalen encourage l'introspection et la connexion, invitant les lectrices à explorer leurs propres parcours.

    The Things We Wish Were True
    This Secret Thing
    • This Secret Thing

      • 303pages
      • 11 heures de lecture
      3,7(115)Évaluer

      Out of love. Out of protection. Out of fear. Everyone has a reason to lie. Everyone in Raleigh, North Carolina, is talking about Norah Ramsey, the single mother accused of being a suburban madam. But Norah's not the only one keeping secrets. After her mother's arrest, Norah's teenage daughter, Violet, is devastated and alone. She has no one to turn to until her grandmother Polly arrives. Polly, long estranged from Norah, is running from her own troubles. Down the street, Bess, once Norah's best friend, desperately tries to hide secrets while Casey, Bess's daughter, flees college after a traumatic event, only to find that home isn't the safe haven she expected. And Nico, the detective who has doggedly pursued Norah Ramsey in hopes that she will lead him to his missing brother, is drawn further into these women's lives while facing his own domestic disturbance. Scandal has brought each of them to a crossroads. Now, as they delve into Norah's secrets, they must come to terms with secrets of their own--ones that still have the power to hurt or to heal.

      This Secret Thing
    • The Things We Wish Were True

      • 278pages
      • 10 heures de lecture
      3,6(11682)Évaluer

      After an accident at the community pool and the return of a long-absent community member, the secret-filled lives of the residents of Sycamore Glen, North Carolina can no longer remain hidden from view.

      The Things We Wish Were True