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Product Details
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Interwoven with the story of the year Annie spent as the captive of a psychopath in a remote mountain cabin, which unfolds through sessions with her psychiatrist, is a second narrative recounting events following her escape—her struggle to piece her shattered life back together and the ongoing police investigation into the identity of her captor.
Still Missing is that rare debut find--a shocking, visceral, brutal and beautifully crafted debut novel.
Heading to a beach? Boy do I have the book for you!
Every now and then a new author comes along that totally knocks one out of the park. As a reader, I’m always thrilled to discover a great new voice. As a writer, of course I’m insanely jealous and suffer a terrible case of why-didn’t-I-think-of-that? Given that debut author Chevy Stevens is young, beautiful and talented, I’ve been gnashing my teeth for months!
Still Missing represents psychological suspense at its very best. Realtor Annie O’Sullivan is abducted from an open house and held captive for a year in a remote cabin by a sadistic survivalist who considers her to be his wife as well as preferred breeding stock. His goal is to get her pregnant and live creepily-ever-after as the last man and woman on earth. Her goal is to get away from him.
Now, you know Annie wins this war as the book opens with her talking to a therapist. So you may ask, where is the suspense? I can’t give you a simple answer to that, other than to say every page crackles with it.
Still Missing creates one of the most haunting narratives I’ve read in years. On the one hand, survivor Annie is tough, angry, and brittle. The very worst has happened to her, and she escaped through her own ingenuity and frankly, savagery. On the other hand, survivor Annie is jumpy, terrified, and sleep-deprived. All these months later, she still can’t pee “off schedule.” In one of the more moving scenes of the novel, she downs a gallon of iced tea in order to force herself to urinate by her own free will. She can’t do it.
In addition to her compelling heroine, Stevens has created one of the best psychopaths since Hannibal Lector—and that’s not something I say lightly. Annie refers to her captor simply as The Freak. Much like Hannibal, The Freak considers himself to be a civilized human being. Intelligent, good looking and resourceful, he’s an excellent “husband.” He has provided a charming cabin. He supplies fresh food—sometimes so fresh that city slicker Annie must bleed it out first, but details, details. Of course he has expectations of his wife. She must be well groomed, properly garbed, and 100% submissive. All failures to comply are met with The Freak’s idea of appropriate punishment. The Freak is also thoughtful and tender. Want to stop sleeping for a few nights? Read the scene where The Freak first shaves Annie. And he means it in the nicest sort of way.
Stevens skillfully juxtapositions the back story of Annie’s captivity with the front story of a woman desperately trying to reclaim her old life. As with all great suspense novels, the surprises abound. Annie thought she’d survived the worst with The Freak. But has she?
As the taut cat and mouse game unfolds, you will cheer for Annie. You will hate The Freak. And you will be absolutely mesmerized by the last line of this novel. Then, most likely, you will return to page one, and start it all over again.
So give yourself a summer vacation. Check out debut author Chevy Stevens, and soon you will be Still Missing.
Annie O’Sullivan has good reason to complain during her regularly scheduled therapy sessions. But the thirtysomething’s revelations go far beyond Portnoy-style gripes. Where once her hometown, the tiny Vancouver Island hamlet of Clayton Falls, was unknown to the general public, it has recently been identified in the popular consciousness as the place where the lady realtor was abducted.
Stevens’ gripping debut novel starts at the end of Annie’s year-long ordeal, during which she was the physical and psychological captive of a blithe psychopath at his remote mountain cabin. The details of her experience, which Annie describes with caustic bluntness, are disturbing and not for squeamish readers. Although those details stay just shy of crossing over into torture-porn, they are necessary if we are to understand how a strong, capable woman like Annie is emotionally and psychologically ravaged.
The real shocks in Annie’s account, however, come after she returns home, when she is forced to cope with personality changes, media scrutiny, and puzzling discrepancies in how her loved ones behave before and after her abduction. Stevens is adept at tightening the noose of suspense, shaping her story so it rises and falls dramatically as it progresses toward its 11th-hour revelations. The final twist will remain in the reader’s mind long after the book is finished.
Still Missing succeeds because it forces the reader to identify with Annie, however uncomfortably; we find ourselves wondering how we would fare in her dire situation, faced with a merciless captor or grappling with narcissism disguised as unconditional family love. While I did wish for some greater care with the prose and heightened attention to police procedure – which leans a little too heavily on American cop show clichés – based on the evidence of her debut, Stevens already has the goods for a strong career in psychological suspense.
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Most helpful customer reviews
7 of 7 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars
Canada's New Queen of Thrillers,
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This review is from: Still Missing (Hardcover)
Canada's New Queen of ThrillersLock your doors, check the alarm system and call your German shepherd. Then open this book. Canada has a new crime writer with the talents that made Hannibal Lector an archetype of evil. Fear sets fast its talons in STILL MISSING and never releases its grip. Young and pretty Annie O'Sullivan, a Vancouver Island realtor with nothing more to worry her than a fractious mother and a tediously patient boyfriend, has just started a promising career. One sunny afternoon, she holds an open house. Business is slow. As she's wrapping up, she shows one last customer the stunning ocean views. He's well-dressed and amiable. The perfect disguise. Within five blurry minutes, she's ripped from her world into a woman's worst nightmare. And no one has seen a thing. Warning: This is powerful page-turning, poetry turned to prose with a charge of poison. Newcomer Stevens has both the talent and technique to carry off a master coup worthy of a seasoned author. Using the dark and deep temperate rainforest as her smothering backdrop, she creates a house of horrors in the waiting woods. Every time you think it can't get worse, it turns another corner into madness. Annie must draw from a well of strength she never suspected she had, especially with the history of a dysfunctional family. Here she draws an indelible picture of the frustrations of living in a depressed, single-industry town: We moved to a cramped two-bedroom rental in the worst part of Clayton Falls, with a view of the pulp mill. The pill bottles had been replaced with vodka bottles. Mom's pink silk robes were now nylon and her Estee Lauder White Linen perfume was a knockoff version. We may have been tight on money, but she still managed to scrape up enough for her French cigarettes-Mom thinks anything French is elegant-and her not-so-elegant vodka. Popov isn't Smirnoff The villain, aka The Freak, grows in enormity like the unfolding of a train wreck. But he is three-dimensional, slowly revealed by a sinister background. The distorted reasons for his actions provoke a strange empathy for his own personal torture chamber that whispers of Milton's Satan: Myself am hell, nor am I out of it. Annie's voice is true, changing as she struggles to first understand her fate and then attempt to triumph over it. Only the memory of a close girlfriend and her own faithful golden retriever Annie sustain her. We all want to believe that the truth shall make us free. Stevens turns this adage on its head with the constant question, "What if?. The story begs for a screenplay follow-up, but perhaps the written word has the benefit of the horrors of the imagination.. .
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful
3.0 out of 5 stars
Decent first effort.,
By
This review is from: Still Missing (Hardcover)
I did enjoy this story - it was entertaining and kept me interested throughout. The story is dark and compelling.But I do agree with others - the twist was a bit *too* twisted, and the writing wasn't quite as polished as I prefer. It felt a bit disjointed at times - for instance, I felt that the tone Annie used when talking to her psychiatrist didn't quite jive with her character, and didn't fit with the tone. It almost felt a bit humourous, which certainly wouldn't have been the intent. I get what the author was going for, but it wasn't *quite* there. Good effort though! I did enjoy it. And I agree with another reviewer - I could definitely see this working as a movie.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars
Wow - what a debut!,
By
This review is from: Still Missing (Hardcover)
Still Missing is author Chevy Stevens' debut novel. I'd heard good things about it, but the cover blurb from Karin Slaughter sealed the deal.Annie O'Sullivan is a realtor on Vancouver Island. She's just finishing up an open house and is almost ready to leave when a polite, well dressed man asks if she would mind if he had a quick look around before she locks up. He seems okay, so Annie says yes. " What the hell, a few more minutes wouldn't kill me." The okay looking guy abducts Annie and keeps her prisoner for over a year.... Still Missing opens with Annie finally seeing a psychiatrist she feels she can talk to after she escapes. Slowly but surely we learn the details of her time in captivity - her fears, resolve and will to survive no matter what. I normally don't like first person narrative, but it is absolutely the right style for this novel. I found myself holding my breath many times as I frantically turned page after page. For me the book was two parts - the kidnapped year and the time after Annie returns to her life. The return to her life isn't the relief you would expect. Stevens has thrown in some twists that will have you guessing right 'til the end. An absolutely thrilling debut from a new Canadian voice. I can't wait to read her second novel Never Knowing - due out in the summer of 2011. I found Stevens' background on Still Missing interesting - she was a realtor on the island and between potential clients at open houses "she spent hours scaring herself with thoughts of horrible things that could happen to her. Her most terrifying scenario, which began with being abducted, was the inspiration for Still Missing." Fans of Karin Slaughter, Chelsea Cain and Lisa Gardener would like this book.
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