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Fault Lines
Fault Lines
Fault Lines
Audiobook (abridged)5 hours

Fault Lines

Written by Anne Rivers Siddons

Narrated by Kate Burton

Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars

3.5/5

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About this audiobook

“A literary meteor shower....One great read.”

Detroit News

 

A classic from New York Times bestselling author Anne Rivers Siddons, Fault Lines is the powerful and deeply moving story of three women on a life-changing road trip up the California coast. Pat Conroy (The Prince of Tides) says that Siddons, “ranks among the best of us and delivers the goods—the whole fabulous package—with every book she writes.” Fault Lines is one of her finest, a truly stunning read from a novelist acclaimed for her wondrous array of literary masterworks—from Sweetwater Creek to Up Island through Low Country and Nora Nora.

LanguageEnglish
PublisherHarperAudio
Release dateNov 1, 2005
ISBN9780060879273
Fault Lines
Author

Anne Rivers Siddons

Anne Rivers Siddons is the New York Times bestselling author of 19 novels that include Nora, Nora, Sweetwater Creek, Islands, Peachtree Road, and Outer Banks. She is also the author of the nonfiction work John Chancellor Makes Me Cry.

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Reviews for Fault Lines

Rating: 3.4000000514285715 out of 5 stars
3.5/5

105 ratings14 reviews

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  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    A woman whose family has issues to put mildly takes an adventure traveling from Atlanta to Palm Springs to LA and eventually to the outskirts of Palo Alto to follow her run away daughter and conspiring sister.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    The Silent Girls is one of those stories that grabs you from the beginning and keeps you wanting more. A very creepy murder mystery. Young women are missing and turning up dead which is bad enough but Frank Rath is tormented with these deaths. Why? His sister and brother in law were murdered many years ago and the case had not been solved. He took in and adopted his little niece who was in the house when the murders occurred. Abortion is always a touchy topic and I think the author took on this topic with empathy and used as the underlying plot of the story is admirable. I loved the pace of the story and just the way it was written reminded me of a good British mystery, even though it was not. I highly recommend this book to anyone who loves a great story with believable characters and settings.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    It started out to be a thrilling journey to a very dark place...but toward the end the whole climax seemed rushed. It didn’t exactly take anything away from the story but I was just expecting a slower journey after the great beginning. I’m going to give this author and the series another try. I believe there is promise there and I already have another book by this author.
  • Rating: 1 out of 5 stars
    1/5
    Oh, my. I didn't like this book for a variety of reasons. I'll explain, and then you can decide for yourself whether my opinion matters.I picked up this book on a whim while out shopping. Nothing on the cover, the back copy, or the inside title page mentions this being the second book in a series. The series title is nowhere to be found. And so I was confused when I started reading and found there was little to no character development. I felt like I was somehow supposed to know more about the main characters. And then I popped online to write my review, and I saw the series information, which explained a lot. That being said, the story stands mostly on its own, so you can read it without having read the first, if you don't mind the shortage of character development.The characters are not likable. Well, at least I didn't like them. They're shallow and stereotypical, like chess pieces there only to advance the plot. An ex-cop bordering on a drug addiction, a detective with anger issues, a female cop trying to push against the male-dominated system, etc.The writing style strives for a literary feel. Sometimes the author hits the mark, while other times he tries too hard and it shows.We have too many plotlines and, consequently, too many directions in which to focus, so that the content feels scattered.We spend a whole lot of time on irrelevant activities and introspection. For instance, I don't even want to count the number of times we had to endure lengthy looks at and details about bloody deer carcasses. I got that Rath hunts. Enough already. We also have three-quarters of a page on the best donuts in town, way too many pages about a minor character's obsession with running and how it's ruining her marriage, and a whole lot of personal reflection and childhood reminiscing. None of that adds anything to the story. Add in snide comments and political commentary (rants), and sometimes I forgot the point of the story was supposed to be a missing girl.The opening scene is vivid and gruesome. No details are spared. This works to get our attention, and would have been a perfect opening had the story retained focus and the pace remained consistent. It didn't. Instead we have lulls of tedium punctuated by explicit scenes.The author's tendency to separate words with periods, most noticeably the word 'but', drove me nuts. This would have worked had it been the speaking style of one character. But. Every single character spoke this way. But. The technique was also liberally used in the exposition, so that it was clearly the author's style rather than a particular character's. All those periods to force stops. Just. To. Annoy. Me. I think. Then about halfway through or so, the pace finally picks up and things start to happen. Unfortunately, it also takes a wide turn into the zone of absurdity and becomes a political statement of sorts. I'm okay with political statements, when the plot is well executed and believable. That's not the case here.And, finally, this book ends with one of my pet peeves - the dreaded cliffhanger. I'm not a fan. Whether part of a series or not, I prefer stories to have an ending. I don't like threads left dangling like bait to get me to pick up the next book. Which I won't do. In this case. Clearly.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Young women are disappearing and they are trying to find the connection. Once they do things get crazed and scary for the main character and his daughter.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    A girl goes missing and Frank Rath is called in to solve the mystery. A former police detective who quit to raise his niece after his sister and brother in-law were found murdered. Now as a side activity he helps solve crimes the police can’t. As he investigates the missing girl he realizes this case is much deeper than it first appears and involves more than one missing girl; a string of girls that all have one thing in common despite many other differences. His problem now, finding who did it and where the girls are being kept. Intriguing story of how one selfish act can alter another person for life and sometimes create a psychopath.
  • Rating: 1 out of 5 stars
    1/5
    By a third of the way through this book I was ready to give up and move to something better. I struggled with it either being bad narration or bad writing: I decided on both my particularly the writing. Long sequences of things like: I hit Dad. Dad hit me. I kicked Dad. Dad punched me. .... Purple hair said...., so I said to Purple Hair. Then Purple Hair grabbed my wrist, I told Purple Hair to let go.....and on and on. Made me want to hit mute or wish for the ability to skim. The whole book seemed to be going nowhere fast and when it got to the "surprise" ending all I could do was yawn. That "shocking twist" could be seen from space. So obviously I had finished the book and am now happy to move along to something better, which shouldn't be too hard. I did not realize this was part of a series, but I won't be following up with any others. Lessons learned.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Well written and suspenseful, this is a great summer mystery read. Frank Rath is a private investigator who formerly wore a detective's badge. The setting is rural Vermont. And, what I liked best about this book is the very detailed description of the area, and those who live there. There is a mixture of those who are poor, with little social skills, and sadly are eeking out a living. And, then there are transplants who like the beauty of the countryside.When the car of a young girl is found without the girl anywhere near the vehicle, she is judged missing. Rath makes it his mission to discover what happened. Working with a team of others, there is tension between the team regarding how best to proceed. Soon, the fact that many girls have gone missing within specific radius, the hunt is on to find the link between these very dis-similar individuals.Rath is rough, and he is likeable. When he sister and her husband were brutally murdered at the hands of a sociopath, Rath then adopts his niece. And now, he worries more about his young college-aged daughter, knowing how quickly something can unfold and harm.A quick read, I'll give this one Three stars.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Starts with a very strange and horrific murder. Frank Roth has seen his share of the horrific, the murder in the past of his sister and her husband, a murder Frank for which Frank feels a great deal of responsibility. Their daughter at the time was a young child and Frank has raised her as his own. Now as an free lance investigator Frank fins himself embroiled in a missing persons case. One tied to a friend of his still on the force. The investigation will lead to a radical anti-abortion group.Loved the twists and turns as the plot lines are brought together. At the end a psychopathic murderer will gain parole, a murderer with strong ties to Franks past. Good storyline and strong characters, and of course by the way the book ended it looks like their will definitely be a follow-up.ARC from Netgalley.
  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    Frank Rath, ex-detective turned private investigator, is drawn into the intriguing mystery surrounding Mandy Wilks, an emancipated sixteen-year-old who is missing. As the investigation progresses, several other girls are added to the “missing” list, but Frank can see no obvious connection between the young women and the elusive “why” that would link the girls remains unknown.Despite considerable distracting personal baggage, Frank remains focused on the investigation, doggedly searching for answers in the desperate hope of finding Mandy alive.The increasingly-complex plot involving the missing girls easily draws the reader into the story, and this decidedly creepy tale probably has more than enough twists and turns to satisfy aficionados of the genre. However, the unrelated and unnecessary Ned Preacher subplot detracts from the missing girls storyline; similarly, both the lack of plot resolution and the reveal regarding Mandy’s disappearance are particularly unsatisfying. The author’s exquisite descriptions are richly drawn, providing the reader with an authentic sense of place. But the annoying overuse of expletives and religious/political viewpoints masquerading as storytelling are likely to be extremely offensive to many readers. In addition, the unexpected, out of left field no-ending-ending is decidedly off-putting, apt to leave frustrated readers feeling as if they have been cheated.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I enjoy Ann Rivers Siddons books, and this was no exception. Family stress over a mother-in-law with Alzheimers erupts into a run-away daughter, a fire, a movie, and a man in love with earthquakes. Some of the relationships were a bit cloying, but it was still well worth the time.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Has a lot of potential,but got a little bogged down with guilt trips.
  • Rating: 1 out of 5 stars
    1/5
    In a word: awful.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Entertaining with an annoying and gratuitous ending.