The characters were pretty realistic, especially Laurel and Noelle Donnelly. In other words, the book is like The Childby Fiona Barton if it had mainly focused on how Angela and her family dealt with the disappearance and how she fell apart because of it. Unanswered questions that Laurel had tried to bury rise up as well as new ones about Floyd and Poppy. One of whom is his youngest Poppy, who looks a lot like Ellie. Soon after, they start dating, and she meets his daughters. Ten years later, her recently divorced mother Laurel is trying to put her life back together when she meets Floyd Dunn in a café. In Then She Was Gone, a 15-year-old girl named Ellie Mack – the apple of her family’s eye – goes missing. However, I recently read Then She Was Gone by Lisa Jewell – another book that falls under that category, but its characters and twists make it worthwhile. Even though those novels were good, I’m kind of getting bored, especially if I know what the outcome is going to be a third of the way in. For a while on this website, I’ve been reviewing suspense books, specifically ones with the “missing person” trope.
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