I KNOW YOU KNOW continually stumped me. But to willing abuse a child who has any type of needs is even lower than low. The story line was warped and so far fetched from reality that I found myself pausing at several parts not wanting to continue. Taylor Edison, now aged 21, reflects on her unhappy childhood, focusing on terrible events that began ten years ago. Although wonderfully written its not an easy book to read.Horrifying. I Know What You Are.

We’d love your help. ‘What a ride, I loved this book and the brilliant Hitchcockian twist!’ Sarah Michelle GellarFor most folks, being suspected in the disappearance of their spouse would be about as bad as it gets, but not for London actress Aimee Sinclair, the narrator of bestseller Feeney's shock-filled second thriller (after 2018's Sometimes I Lie). Aimee's past is much darker than the disturbing film with a famous director for which she desperately wants to audition and her future seems to be barreling full tilt toward the stuff of nightmares. The struggles they go through trying to navigate a world they can't fully understand, yet comes at the like speed of a jet plane s hard enough. I applaud Taylor for being able to survive all she has and want to do better by her own child! It was a quick read. But to willing abuse a child who has any type of needs is even lower than low. How could the number of men who hurt this girl and used her not even once realize that she couldn't grasp everything that was happening to her. Sad story of a girl who hated herself so much she allowed so many men to use and abuse her. Alice Feeney’s follow-up to her best-selling 2017 whodunit “Sometimes I Lie” features that inescapable staple of the modern thriller, the unreliable narrator. In I Know Who You Are, Alice Feeney proves that she is a master of brilliantly complicated plots and killer twists that will keep you guessing until the final page. Just finished this one, good story with twists here and there that keeps you guessing but again an ending I didn’t see coming!I was hoping for a really engaging holiday read after the first book was so successful but this book was predictable and just such a distasteful, unnecessary book to publish. How you can let your child knowingly be abused and be OK with it is beyond anything I can comprehend! The ending is a doozy. “A tightly woven, intricately plotted, heart-in-your-throat thriller, I couldn’t put this book down!

It was true feeling and what actually happened during this process as well as how she grew up.

The story can not be rated with stars, the person in question has experienced something that no one is entitled to judge.I liked this, I did struggle with the subject matter. Even in writing! For starters, Aimee's husband of two years, journalist Ben Bailey, vanishes from their Notting Hill town house the day after they have a fight and she asks him for a divorce. But yet I have to say that the mother is even more despicable! The founder of the Momofuku restaurant group, Chang is a chef, TV persona...The moving true story of a little girl with Asperger syndrome, controlled and abused by the one person she called her friend.The moving true story of a little girl with Asperger syndrome, controlled and abused by the one person she called her friend.I Know What You Are: The true story of a lonely little girl abused by those she trusted mostIt is hard to rate an autobiography...how can you rate someone’s experience?? It is despicable to me. You can’t.Anyone who abuses a child, in my humble opinion, deserves a fate much worse than death.

I just loved it it!



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