The Water Lies
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Narrado por:
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Courtney Patterson
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Natalie Duke
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De:
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Amy Meyerson
Internationally bestselling author Amy Meyerson takes readers on a harrowing journey where two mothers—one of a woman who drowned and the other of a toddler who might know what happened to her—are the only ones searching for the truth.
Heavily pregnant with her second child, Tessa Irons has enough on her mind without her toddler throwing tantrums at the local coffee shop. The boy is inconsolable, shouting “Gigi!” to a woman Tessa’s never seen before—and never will again. The next morning, the woman’s body is dredged up from the canal outside the Ironses’ posh Venice Beach home, and Tessa’s gut tells her it’s no coincidence.
Barb Geller refuses to believe that her daughter’s death was just some drunken accident. She heads to California for answers, where she crosses paths with Tessa. Together they hunt for the truth, certain they’ll find a connection between their children.
But the police don’t believe them. Tessa’s husband dismisses her worries as pregnancy jitters, and even though people are always watching along the Canals, no one saw a thing. Tessa and Barb only have each other, their intuition, and the creeping sense of danger that grows with every shocking revelation.
©2025 by Amy Meyerson. (P)2025 Brilliance Publishing, Inc., all rights reserved.Los oyentes también disfrutaron:
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“As an author, Amy Meyerson is gifted with a genuine talent for the kind of narrative driven storytelling style that fully engages the reader’s rapt attention from start to finish. Her newest novel, The Water Lies is an extraordinary and original suspense thriller…”—Midwest Book Review
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It’s the kind of book that quietly pulls you in and makes you reflect rather than rush to turn the page. I truly did like it, especially for how honestly it explored difficult themes and the human side of them. If you enjoy stories that are more psychological than thriller, this is a really good one to pick up.
Solid Read
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. Decent easy listen.
C+/B- rating
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The life we live
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Compelling mystery that will keep you guessing
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At its core, this novel is about money, power, and the quiet violations that happen when women’s bodies and choices are treated like commodities. Meyerson takes an already sensitive topic—egg donation and fertility—and turns it into something deeply unsettling. What happens when something meant to be generous and hopeful is corrupted? What if your frozen eggs, saved for your own future, were used without your consent? What if the child you’re raising isn’t genetically yours at all? These questions aren’t just plot devices—they linger, and they hurt.
What struck me most was how accurately the book reflects the reality so many women face: struggling to make money, searching for safe and respectable work, and navigating systems where exploitation hides behind legality. The idea that donation—something that should be praised—can be twisted into something shameful and sinister is heartbreaking. As Meyerson puts it perfectly: “Violations!” That word echoes throughout the entire story.
The mystery unfolds patiently, layering emotional weight onto the suspense. When the truth finally comes out—when you realize who the murderer is—it doesn’t feel triumphant. It feels devastating. You almost can’t blame them. The pain of not being able to save your child, only to later understand why everything happened the way it did, is absolutely crushing.
One thing that really irritated me throughout the book was the husband. From the very beginning, it’s painfully obvious that he knows exactly who “Gigi” is, yet he spends so much time making his wife feel irrational, paranoid, and overly emotional. His constant lying, deflecting, and dismissing felt deliberate—classic gaslighting behavior that made me angry on her behalf. As a reader, you can sense immediately that something isn’t right, and watching him manipulate the narrative while quietly holding onto the truth was infuriating. Instead of being a partner, he becomes another source of violation in a story already heavy with betrayal.
This isn’t just a thriller; it’s a moral gut punch. Sad, thought-provoking, and quietly enraging, The Water Lies stayed with me long after I finished it—and that, to me, is the mark of a really good book.
The Water Lies
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