A review by sarabearian
The Good Daughter by Karin Slaughter

This is an outstanding book. I struggle to figure out why Karin Slaughter writes so amazingly well about events that surround horrendous crimes. She can develop characters so completely that you expect to actually meet them. You, as a reader, could describe their reactions to new situations. She can create the setting and atmosphere so realistically that even if you are reading in the heat of summer, when her story describes the cold of winter; you are there. Her dialog is realistic. You end up feeling you are eavesdropping rather than reading. So, given those considerable talents, the question is, has she given us a good tale this time? Has she created something we can really puzzle over? The story is complex and simple, simultaneously. Something awful happened to two young sisters and then 20 years passed and now time catches up, as it always does. The ability to pace the story and hold back pieces while moving forward is a real skill. That's the part that keeps the reader turning pages late at night and looking bleary-eyed in the morning. As I did and I presume you will also. I've worked hard not to give anything away here. The less you know when you start, the better. Let Slaughter tell her own tale. All I want to tell you is the book is fantastic and yes, go read it. -Suzanne R.