Summary: At last, Helena Pelletier has the life she deserves. A loving
husband, two beautiful daughters, a business that fills her days. Then she catches
an emergency news announcement and realizes she was a fool to think she could
ever leave her worst days behind her.
Helena has a secret:
she is the product of an abduction. Her mother was kidnapped as a teenager by
her father and kept in a remote cabin in the marshlands of Michigan’s Upper
Peninsula. No electricity, no heat, no running water, not a single human beyond
the three of them. Helena, born two years after the abduction, loved her home
in nature—fishing, tracking, hunting. And despite her father’s odd temperament
and sometimes brutal behavior, she loved him, too...until she learned precisely
how savage a person he could be.
More than twenty years later, she has buried
her past so soundly that even her husband doesn’t know the truth. But now her
father has killed two guards, escaped from prison, and disappeared into the
marshland he knows better than anyone else in the world. The police commence a
manhunt, but Helena knows they don’t stand a chance. Knows that only one person
has the skills to find the survivalist the world calls the Marsh King—because
only one person was ever trained by him: his daughter.
Angie’s comments: The story alternates between past and present. The
descriptions of the wilderness and the complexity of the feelings Helena has
for her parents and upbringing make the book a compelling read. There is a nice
blend of action and emotion.
Recommended for readers of psychological thrillers.
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August 28, 2017
The Marsh King's Daughter
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