The Lost Woman – a drama with psychological factors

Marriage could be a serious murderer …

On one hot summer early morning in Missouri, the special day when Nick and Amy were remembering 5 years of married life, Amy disappears. Presents are prepared, procedures happen to be made, yet Amy all of a sudden disappears of their home, and what is left behind signifies violence. Remnants from blood clumsily cleared, doorway opened, desk together with closet the other way up…
When all start looking for the stunning, brilliant and amusing woman -the incredible Amy – Nick does not look worried in the way a guy whose beloved wife is kidnapped should really be like. When officers begin to dig much deeper, these people realize that Nick does not seem trusting as they believed in the beginning, on the contrary, he might have had a reason to kill his wife. The reader of this narrative has also an opportunity to study Amy’s diary, whose missing part can’t be found from the police, so readers themselves are picturing the amazing Amy.
Is Nick really the killer of his spouse? So why would he do this? Is Amy so amazing as everybody around her think, or perhaps has she really provided him reasons to hurt his wife for some reason? This book is actually complicated and also tangled. By means of Interesting ending and plots found on around Five hundred pages (they are unnecessary for the book, believe me, I do not realise why they are unnaturally pumped with content so as to have more pages, when it is unnecessary, I’ll never fully understand …) you’ll come to a rather distinctive final outcome and finish. You’ve here something that you definitely haven’t expected, says Ely Sakhai. A scenario that some would such as, others would not.

This is a thriller having psychological elements, this is how would be best explained what goes on inside this book and so I would certainly question what is going on in the head of the writer? I think that the man must have a bizarre distort in the head to create this narrative. While you read through thepages chaos feels in part of the characters, things that make, the main dialogues … I am hoping that it’s a brilliant writer to whom is so easy to change from a single to a different overall tone of narration. I just don’t have more comments and I also can not discuss much more without telling you the outcome of the story.
Having a clear conscience, Ely Sakhai says, read through this bizarre novel and you’ll certainly not be dissatisfied …

Ely Sakhai
Ely Sakhai


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