Download PDF The Couple Next Door: A Novel, by Shari Lapena
Simply link your gadget computer system or gadget to the web attaching. Obtain the modern innovation making your downloading The Couple Next Door: A Novel, By Shari Lapena finished. Also you do not want to review, you could directly close the book soft file and open The Couple Next Door: A Novel, By Shari Lapena it later. You could additionally conveniently get the book everywhere, because The Couple Next Door: A Novel, By Shari Lapena it is in your gizmo. Or when being in the office, this The Couple Next Door: A Novel, By Shari Lapena is likewise suggested to review in your computer system tool.

The Couple Next Door: A Novel, by Shari Lapena

Download PDF The Couple Next Door: A Novel, by Shari Lapena
Use the sophisticated technology that human creates today to locate the book The Couple Next Door: A Novel, By Shari Lapena effortlessly. However first, we will certainly ask you, how much do you like to check out a book The Couple Next Door: A Novel, By Shari Lapena Does it consistently until finish? Wherefore does that book read? Well, if you really love reading, aim to review the The Couple Next Door: A Novel, By Shari Lapena as one of your reading collection. If you only read the book based upon demand at the time and also incomplete, you have to attempt to such as reading The Couple Next Door: A Novel, By Shari Lapena initially.
As understood, book The Couple Next Door: A Novel, By Shari Lapena is well known as the home window to open up the world, the life, and extra point. This is what the people currently require so much. Even there are many individuals which do not like reading; it can be a selection as referral. When you truly need the methods to produce the following inspirations, book The Couple Next Door: A Novel, By Shari Lapena will really direct you to the means. In addition this The Couple Next Door: A Novel, By Shari Lapena, you will have no remorse to get it.
To get this book The Couple Next Door: A Novel, By Shari Lapena, you could not be so baffled. This is online book The Couple Next Door: A Novel, By Shari Lapena that can be taken its soft data. It is various with the on-line book The Couple Next Door: A Novel, By Shari Lapena where you can purchase a book and afterwards the vendor will send out the published book for you. This is the area where you can get this The Couple Next Door: A Novel, By Shari Lapena by online and also after having handle purchasing, you can download and install The Couple Next Door: A Novel, By Shari Lapena on your own.
So, when you need quick that book The Couple Next Door: A Novel, By Shari Lapena, it does not need to get ready for some days to get guide The Couple Next Door: A Novel, By Shari Lapena You could straight get the book to save in your tool. Also you love reading this The Couple Next Door: A Novel, By Shari Lapena everywhere you have time, you could appreciate it to read The Couple Next Door: A Novel, By Shari Lapena It is definitely helpful for you which want to get the a lot more valuable time for reading. Why do not you invest five minutes and spend little money to get the book The Couple Next Door: A Novel, By Shari Lapena right here? Never ever let the extra thing quits you.

An instant New York Times bestseller. Look out for Shari Lapena's next thriller, A STRANGER IN THE HOUSE, coming August 2017.
“The twists come as fast [as] you can turn the pages.”�—People
“Provocative and shocking.”�—Lisa Gardner,�New York Times bestselling author of Find Her
“I read this novel at one sitting, absolutely riveted by the storyline.� The suspense was beautifully rendered and unrelenting!” —Sue Grafton,�New York Times�bestselling author of�X
It all started at a dinner party. . .
A domestic suspense debut about a young couple and their apparently friendly neighbors—a twisty, rollercoaster ride of lies, betrayal, and the secrets between husbands and wives. . .
Anne and Marco Conti seem to have it all—a loving relationship, a wonderful home, and their beautiful baby, Cora. But one night when they are at a dinner party next door, a terrible crime is committed. Suspicion immediately focuses on the parents. But the truth is a much more complicated story.
Inside the curtained house, an unsettling account of what actually happened unfolds. Detective Rasbach knows that the panicked couple is hiding something. Both Anne and Marco �soon discover that the other is keeping secrets, secrets they've kept for years.�
What follows is the nerve-racking unraveling of a family—a chilling tale of �deception, duplicity, and unfaithfulness that will keep you breathless until the final shocking twist.
- Sales Rank: #678998 in Books
- Published on: 2016-08-23
- Released on: 2016-08-23
- Formats: Audiobook, CD, Unabridged
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 7
- Dimensions: 5.90" h x 1.20" w x 5.10" l,
- Running time: 510 minutes
- Binding: Audio CD
Review
“Meticulously crafted and razor-sharp.��The Couple Next Door�lingers long after you turn the final page.”�—Harlan Coben, #1�New York Times�bestselling author of�Fool Me Once
"The twists come as fast [as] you can turn the pages."�--People
"Provocative and shocking. �One crime, an entire neighborhood of suspects, secrets and lies. �How well do we ever know those around us? �The Couple Next Door�will keep you glued the pages in search of the answer. �Even then, you'll never guess the truth...until it's too late.”�--Lisa Gardner, #1�New York Times�bestselling�author of�Find Her
“I read this novel at one sitting,�absolutely riveted by the storyline.� The suspense was beautifully rendered and unrelenting!”�—Sue Grafton,�New York Times�bestselling author of�X
“Real men read women writers–because of books like this. Trust me.” —Lee Child, #1 New York Times bestselling author of Make Me
"Shari Lapena has written a stunning debut thriller.� Turn on the night lights and lock all your doors and windows.� The Couple Next Door grabs you with each twist and shocks you with every betrayal." —Linda Fairstein, New York Times bestselling author of Killer Look
"A twisty, utterly riveting tale that will send readers on a wild rollercoaster ride of emotions. Shocking revelations kept me turning the pages like a madwoman." —Tess Gerritsen, New York Times bestselling author of Playing with Fire
“Expertly paced and finely crafted,�The Couple Next Door�is a gripping thriller of the highest order. I couldn’t put it down.”��—A. J. Banner, bestselling author of�The Good Neighbor
“Gripped me from the very beginning to the very end!”�--Becky Masterman, author of�Rage Against The Dying
“Brilliant! This utterly riveting psychological thriller hurtles along at breakneck speed, never giving you the opportunity to catch your breath. Twisty, turny, and unputdownable.” —C. L. Taylor, bestselling� author of The Lie
“Exquisitely torturous tension.” —NPR.org
“Where did that baby go! It’s hard not to read to the end to find out, and the twists waiting there are gratifyingly clever.”—USA Today
“The many never-saw-them-coming twists and questionable characters. . . will keep you on the edge of your seat. First-time novelist Lapena’s writing is spare and tense, and it makes The Couple Next Door a compulsive read. The last line is absolutely killer.” –Good Housekeeping
“[A] well-sculpted domestic thriller . . . highly suspenseful . . . Twists are subtly revealed with aplomb, taking the story to increasingly unpredictable levels.” —Associated Press
“[A] suspenseful, heart-wrenching debut. . . After numerous twists and turns, Lapena delivers one final, deftly crafted surprise.” —Publishers Weekly
“Brisk prose style and character development are almost beside the point in Lapena’s suspense-fiction debut; this is a plot-driven page-turner, and even the most�character-focused readers will find it hard to put down.” —Booklist�
About the Author
SHARI LAPENA worked as a lawyer and as an English teacher before turning to writing fiction. She has written two award-winning literary novels, and�The Couple Next Door�is her suspense debut.
Excerpt. � Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
***This excerpt is from an advance uncorrected copy proof***
Copyright � 2016 Shari Lapena
One
�
Anne can feel the acid churning in her stomach and creeping up her throat; her head is swimming. She's had too much to drink. Cynthia has been topping her up all night. Anne had meant to keep herself to a limit, but she'd let things slide-she didn't know how else she was supposed to get through the evening. Now she has no idea how much wine she's drunk over the course of this interminable dinner party. She'll have to pump and dump her breast milk in the morning.
�
Anne wilts in the heat of the summer night and watches her hostess with narrowed eyes. Cynthia is flirting openly with Anne's husband, Marco. Why does Anne put up with it? Why does Cynthia's husband, Graham, allow it? Anne is angry but powerless; she doesn't know how to put a stop to it without looking pathetic and ridiculous. They are all a little tanked. So she ignores it, quietly seething, and sips at the chilled wine. Anne wasn't brought up to create a scene, isn't one to draw attention to herself.
�
Cynthia, on the other hand . . .
�
All three of them-Anne, Marco, and Cynthia's mild-mannered husband, Graham-are watching her, as if fascinated. Marco in particular can't seem to take his eyes off Cynthia. She leans in a little too close to Marco as she bends over and fills his glass, her clingy top cut so low that Marco's practically rubbing his nose in her cleavage.
�
Anne reminds herself that Cynthia flirts with everyone. Cynthia has such outrageous good looks that she can't seem to help herself.
�
But the longer Anne watches, the more she wonders if there could actually be something going on between Marco and Cynthia. Anne has never had such suspicions before. Perhaps the alcohol is making her paranoid.
�
No, she decides-they wouldn't be carrying on like this if they had anything to hide. Cynthia is flirting more than Marco is; he is the flattered recipient of her attentions. Marco is almost too good-looking himself-with his tousled dark hair, hazel eyes, and charming smile, he's always attracted attention. They make a striking couple, Cynthia and Marco. Anne tells herself to stop it. Tells herself that of course Marco is faithful to her. She knows he is completely committed to his family. She and the baby are everything to him. He will stand by her no matter what-she takes another gulp of wine-no matter how bad things get.
�
But watching Cynthia drape herself over Marco, Anne is becoming more and more anxious and upset. She is still more than twenty pounds overweight from her pregnancy, six months after having the baby. She thought she'd be back to her pre-pregnancy figure by now, but apparently it takes at least a year. She must stop looking at the tabloids at the grocery-store checkout and comparing herself to all those celebrity moms with their personal trainers who look terrific after mere weeks.
�
But even at her best, Anne could never compete with the likes of Cynthia, her taller, shapelier neighbor-with her long legs, nipped-in waist, and big breasts, her porcelain skin and tumbling jet-black hair. And Cynthia always dressed to kill, in high heels and sexy clothes-even for a dinner party at home with one other couple.
�
Anne can't focus on the conversation around her. She tunes it out and stares at the carved marble fireplace, exactly like the one in her own living-dining room, on the other side of the common wall that Anne and Marco share with Cynthia and Graham; they live in attached brick row houses, typical of this city in upstate New York, solidly built in the late nineteenth century. All the houses in the row are similar-Italianate, restored, expensive-except that Anne and Marco's is at the end of the row and each reflects slight differences in decoration and taste; each one is a small masterpiece.
�
Anne reaches clumsily for her cell phone on the dining table and checks the time. It is almost one o'clock in the morning. She'd checked on the baby at midnight. Marco had gone to check on her at twelve thirty. Then he'd gone out for a cigarette on the back patio with Cynthia, while Anne and Graham sat rather awkwardly at the littered dining table, making stilted conversation. She should have gone out to the backyard with them; there might have been a breeze. But she hadn't, because Graham didn't like to be around cigarette smoke, and it would have been rude, or at least inconsiderate, to leave Graham there all alone at his own dinner party. So for reasons of propriety, she had stayed. Graham, a WASP like herself, is impeccably polite. Why he married a tart like Cynthia is a mystery. Cynthia and Marco had come back in from the patio a few minutes ago, and Anne desperately wants to leave, even if everyone else is still having fun.
�
She glances at the baby monitor sitting at the end of the table, its small red light glowing like the tip of a cigarette. The video screen is smashed-she'd dropped it a couple of days ago and Marco hadn't gotten around to replacing it yet-but the audio is still working. Suddenly she has doubts, feels the wrongness of it all. Who goes to a dinner party next door and leaves her baby alone in the house? What kind of mother does such a thing? She feels the familiar agony set in-she is not a good mother.
�
So what if the sitter canceled? They should have brought Cora with them, put her in her portable playpen. But Cynthia had said no children. It was to be an adult evening, for Graham's birthday. Which is another reason Anne has come to dislike Cynthia, who was once a good friend-Cynthia is not baby-friendly. Who says that a six-month-old baby isn't welcome at a dinner party? How had Anne ever let Marco persuade her that it was okay? It was irresponsible. She wonders what the other mothers in her moms' group would think if she ever told them. We left our six-month-old baby home alone and went to a party next door. She imagines all their jaws dropping in shock, the uncomfortable silence. But she will never tell them. She'd be shunned.
�
She and Marco had argued about it before the party. When the sitter called and canceled, Anne had offered to stay home with the baby-she hadn't wanted to go to the dinner anyway. But Marco was having none of it.
�
"You can't just stay home," he insisted when they argued about it in their kitchen.
�
"I'm fine staying home," she said, her voice lowered. She didn't want Cynthia to hear them through the shared wall, arguing about going to her party.
�
"It will be good for you to get out," Marco countered, lowering his own voice. And then he'd added, "You know what the doctor said."
�
All night long she's been trying to decide whether that last comment was mean-spirited or self-interested or whether he was simply trying to help. Finally she'd given in. Marco persuaded her that with the monitor on next door they could hear the baby anytime she stirred or woke. They would check on her every half hour. Nothing bad would happen.
�
It is one o'clock. Should she check on Cora now or just try to get Marco to leave? She wants to go home to bed. She wants this night to end.
�
She pulls her husband's arm. "Marco," she urges, "we should leave. It's one o'clock."
�
"Oh, don't go yet," Cynthia says. "It's not that late!" She obviously doesn't want the party to be over. She doesn't want Marco to leave. She wouldn't mind at all if Anne left, though, Anne is pretty sure.
�
"Maybe not for you," Anne says, and she manages to sound a little stiff, even though she's drunk, "but I have to be up early to feed the baby."
�
"Poor you," Cynthia says, and for some reason this infuriates Anne. Cynthia has no children, nor has she ever wanted any. She and Graham are childless by choice.
�
Getting Marco to leave the party is difficult. He seems determined to stay. He's having too much fun, but Anne is growing anxious.
�
"Just one more," Marco says to Cynthia, holding up his glass, avoiding his wife's eyes.
�
He is in a strangely boisterous mood tonight-it seems almost forced. Anne wonders why. He's been quiet lately, at home. Distracted, even moody. But tonight, with Cynthia, he's the life of the party. For some time now, Anne has sensed that something is wrong, if only he would tell her what it is. He isn't telling her much of anything these days. He's shutting her out. Or maybe he's withdrawing from her because of her depression, her "baby blues." He's disappointed in her. Who isn't? Tonight he clearly prefers the beautiful, bubbly, sparkly Cynthia.
�
Anne notices the time and loses all patience. "I'm going to go. I was supposed to check on the baby at one." She looks at Marco. "You stay as late as you like," she adds, her voice tight. Marco looks sharply at her, his eyes glittering. Suddenly Anne thinks he doesn't seem that drunk at all, but she feels dizzy. Are they going to argue about this? In front of the neighbors? Really? Anne begins to glance around for her purse, gathers up the baby monitor, realizes then that it's plugged into the wall, and bends over to unplug it, aware of everyone at the table silently staring at her fat ass. Well, let them. She feels like they're ganging up on her, seeing her as a spoilsport. Tears start to burn, and she fights them back. She does not want to burst into tears in front of everyone. Cynthia and Graham don't know about her postpartum depression. They wouldn't understand. Anne and Marco haven't told anyone, with the exception of Anne's mother. Anne has recently confided in her. She knows that her mother won't tell anyone, not even her father. Anne doesn't want anyone else to know, and she suspects Marco doesn't either, although he hasn't said as much. But pretending all the time is exhausting.
�
While her back is turned, she hears Marco's change of heart in the tone of his voice.
�
"You're right. It's late, we should go," he says. She hears him set his wineglass on the table behind her.
�
Anne turns around, brushing the hair out of her eyes with the back of her hand. She desperately needs a haircut. She gives a fake smile and says, "Next time it's our turn to host." And adds silently, You can come to our house, where our child lives with us, and I hope she cries all night and spoils your evening. I'll be sure to invite you when she's teething.
�
They leave quickly after that. They have no baby gear to gather up, just themselves, Anne's purse, and the baby monitor, which she shoves into it. Cynthia looks annoyed at their swift departure-Graham is neutral-and they make their way out the impressively heavy front door and down the steps. Anne grabs hold of the elaborately carved handrail to help her keep her balance. It is just a few short paces along the sidewalk until they are at their own front stairs, with a similar handrail and an equally impressive front door. Anne is walking slightly ahead of Marco, not speaking. She may not speak to him for the rest of the night. She marches up the steps and stops dead.
�
"What?" Marco says, coming up behind her, his voice tense.
�
Anne is staring. The front door is ajar; it is open about three inches.
�
"I know I locked it!" Anne says, her voice shrill.
�
Marco says tersely, "Maybe you forgot. You've had a lot to drink."
�
But Anne isn't listening. She's inside and running up the staircase and down the hall to the baby's room, with Marco right at her heels.
�
When she gets to the baby's room and sees the empty crib, she screams.
�
Two
�
Anne feels her scream inside her own head and reverberating off the walls-her scream is everywhere. Then she falls silent and stands in front of the empty crib, rigid, her hand to her mouth. Marco fumbles with the light switch. They both stare at the empty crib where their baby should be. It is impossible that she not be there. There is no way Cora could have gotten out of the crib by herself. She is barely six months old.
�
"Call the police," Anne whispers, then throws up, the vomit cascading over her fingers and onto the hardwood floor as she bends over. The baby's room, painted a soft butter yellow with stencils of baby lambs frolicking on the walls, immediately fills with the smell of bile and panic.
�
Marco doesn't move. Anne looks up at him. He is paralyzed, in shock, staring at the empty crib, as if he can't believe it. Anne sees the fear and guilt in his eyes and starts to wail-a horrible, keening sound, like an animal in pain.
�
Marco still doesn't budge. Anne bolts across the hall to their bedroom, grabs the phone off the bedside table, and dials 911, her hands shaking, getting vomit all over the phone. Marco finally snaps out of it. She can hear him walking rapidly around the second floor of the house while she stares across the hall at the empty crib. He checks the bathroom, at the top of the stairs, then passes quickly by her on his way to search the spare bedroom and then the last room down the hall, the one they have turned into an office. But even as he does, Anne wonders in a detached way why he is looking there. It's as if part of her mind has split off and is thinking logically. It's not like their baby is mobile on her own. She is not in the bathroom, or the spare bedroom, or the office.
�
Someone has taken her.
�
When the emergency operator answers, Anne cries, "Someone has taken our baby!" She is barely able to calm herself enough to answer the operator's questions.
�
"I understand, ma'am. Try to stay calm. The police are on their way," the operator assures her.
�
Anne hangs up the phone. Her whole body is trembling. She feels like she is going to be sick again. It occurs to her how it will look. They'd left the baby alone in the house. Was that illegal? It must be. How will they explain it?
�
Marco appears at the bedroom door, pale and sick-looking.
�
"This is your fault!" Anne screams, wild-eyed, and pushes past him. She rushes into the bathroom at the top of the stairs and throws up again, this time into the pedestal sink, then washes the mess from her shaking hands and rinses her mouth. She catches a glimpse of herself in the mirror. Marco is standing right behind her. Their eyes meet in the mirror.
Most helpful customer reviews
164 of 178 people found the following review helpful.
The Couple Next Door
By Ashrae
Oh my goodness, this book just blew me away! Just when I thought I'd worked it all out nicely - BAM - all change!
So, with their babysitter cancelling on them, Anne and Marco leave their baby, Cora, at home whilst they "pop" next door for a dinner party. It'll be fine - they have the baby monitor with them and they go to check on her every half hour and they're only next door. What can possibly go wrong?
Quite simply, they arrive home to find the front door open and the baby gone. Anne goes to pieces, Marco freezes, Anne recovers and the police are called. It is then up to Detective Rasbach to try and piece together what actually happened that night. Did the parents cover up, is one or both of them responsible, is it a third party and if so, was it an opportunistic crime or meticulously planned. With most of the suspects being inconsistent with their stories will Rasbach be able to cut through the noise, work out truth from lies, and bring the case to a close?
I loved this book. It grabbed my attention from the very first page, held on tight and wouldn't let me go until the very last. I was completely enthralled by all the twists and turns, secrets and lies and some delicious family dynamics specifically between Marco and his in-laws.
Characters were especially well defined and thus easy to connect to / emote with although, truth be told, apart from Rasbach, I didn't really like any of them! Plotting was excellent and very well executed. As with most books of this genre, it gets a bit convoluted, but it was easy to follow, made sense and so I never got lost.
Pacing was also excellent throughout. The action was high octane most of the way through but there were calmer moments throughout which I was grateful for as they gave me chance to catch my breath before starting off again.
I believe that this is a new genre for this author. If this is the quality for her first effort, I really can't wait to see what she serves up next time.
I received a free ARC of this book in exchange for my honest review.
21 of 22 people found the following review helpful.
The only likable character in the book is the baby.
By vitatrain4life
The only likable character in this book is the baby. Too many plot twists leave the reader just hoping it will end.
9 of 9 people found the following review helpful.
Fun if you're patient but not actually good
By Joe Wintergreen
This is pretty hilariously badly written but a fun spooky little thing if you've got the patience. It could be edited down to probably half the size without affecting the plot, just by removing redundant double-explanations, cliches and conflicting descriptions of the same characters in different parts of the book. There's parts where an entire paragraph is spent on a character's internal monologue, and then another paragraph of the same length has them say the same thing out loud to another character in the same words. A number of plot threads go unresolved, and it seems pretty clear that the author didn't know how to end it so a random stupid thing just happens for no reason. Oh well.
See all 1560 customer reviews...
The Couple Next Door: A Novel, by Shari Lapena PDF
The Couple Next Door: A Novel, by Shari Lapena EPub
The Couple Next Door: A Novel, by Shari Lapena Doc
The Couple Next Door: A Novel, by Shari Lapena iBooks
The Couple Next Door: A Novel, by Shari Lapena rtf
The Couple Next Door: A Novel, by Shari Lapena Mobipocket
The Couple Next Door: A Novel, by Shari Lapena Kindle
The Couple Next Door: A Novel, by Shari Lapena PDF
The Couple Next Door: A Novel, by Shari Lapena PDF
The Couple Next Door: A Novel, by Shari Lapena PDF
The Couple Next Door: A Novel, by Shari Lapena PDF