Nancy Harmon, joven casada y madre de dos hijos, es acusada injustamente del asesinato de los pequeños, pero el fiscal debe retirar los cargos tras la desaparición del único testigo. La pesadilla se vuelve más aterradora cuando el marido de Nancy se suicida y ella, destrozada, se traslada a Cape Cod. En su nueva residencia, Nancy conoce a Ray Eldredge, con quien se casa. Nancy da a luz nuevamente a dos hijos, a quienes cuida con exagerada precaución. Cierto día los niños desaparecen, y la culpabilidad recae, una vez más, en Nancy. Además alguien envía al periódico local información sobre los terribles sucesos de su pasado, así como fotografías recientes de Nancy...
The #1 New York Times bestselling author Mary Higgins Clark has written thirty-eight suspense novels, four collections of short stories, a historical novel, a memoir, and two children’s books. With bestselling author Alafair Burke she wrote the Under Suspicion series. With her daughter Carol Higgins Clark, she has coauthored five more suspense novels. Her sister-in-law is the also author Mary Jane Clark.
Clark’s books have sold more than 100 million copies in the United States alone. Her books are beloved around the world and made her an international bestseller many times over.
It's been too long since I read a book that I rated a 5 star rating. The plot thickens from the second chapter onward. The book is about plotting and characterization. There weren't too many 'big' words in the book. Consider, that even popular thriller writers, say, like David Baldacci, often throw in a difficult word or two.
Mary Higgins Clark doesn't waste any words. They came piling in, one after another, until I felt sure, each sentence will make me understand a new thing about the Cape (the setting) and its people. It was a delectable experience to read Where are the Children.
The plot of the books is like many of its kind, but what I want to underline is that the book has aged well. There are so many thrillers saturating the market that I feel I need to try and make you read this one, just in case you overlook it.
It's one of the best books by the author, and I will go back for more, especially if it is of the same. The same in terms of quality. The same in terms of pacing. The same in terms of expectations. The book is not brilliant, but the achievement of the author is that she makes it look easy. She does the simple thing simply well. You might say I liked the book. You are right. I think you might too, and I hope I'm right as well.
If you look at this book in the context of its time, it's actually sort of shocking. The plot is really tightly wrought and the characters are strong and likable in a way that seems natural today, but was very bold back in the day.
I see Mary a lot at crime writing functions and she is always the best dressed, most glamorous author in the room. (Granted, this is not a high bar, but still)
Where Are the Children? by Mary Higgins Clark is a 2023 Pocket Books publication. (Originally published in 1975 by Simon & Schuster)
If I have my information straight, this was MHC’s first novel of suspense, which was originally published in 1975. Of course, we all know she went on to earn the ‘Queen of Suspense’ moniker and had a very long, successful career.
I can’t tell you with complete honesty, if I ever read this book before, but if I did, it was too long ago for me to remember- so I'm happy to see the book has been reissued so I can read it before Alafair Burke's follow-up- which I am so excited about!!
(Burke co-authored a series with Clark before her death, so she is familiar with Clark’s style of writing, and I hope she will continue to keep her legacy going. It seems fitting that Burke would begin with a story featuring Nancy's adult children.)
But before I get ahead of myself- let's take a look at this classic:
Nancy was in her twenties when her two children were murdered, and she became the prime suspect. She was convicted of the crime, but was let go on a technicality. She started over, got remarried, had more children, and lived a quiet life off the Cape, hoping a key witness would stay hidden and that she would never be recognized or retried for murder.
Unfortunately, the absolute worse happens when Nancy’s children disappear- again!
For a book written back in the mid-seventies, this story featured some taboo topics, for its time, such a pedophilia, which publishers were apparently concerned about. Though there are some signs of age, this story stands the test of time very well. The suspense is indeed intense, and although I am a jaded reader, I was on the edge of my seat a few times.
Overall, I thought for a first-time suspense writer this book was well executed and fast-paced. I can see why Clark became so popular! This is a quick read and a real page turner, too. I can’t wait to see how Burke continues this story with Nancy’s adult children!
Seven years ago, Nancy Harmon fled the west coast and landed in a small Cape Cod town. She wanted to live a solitary life anonymously after having been convicted of killing her two children and later having that conviction overturned on a technicality. She’s now remarried with two children and it’s her birthday, which she doesn’t normally celebrate. Her son and daughter are outside playing when she discovers something that threatens to shatter her world. But, when Nancy goes to bring her children inside, there nowhere to be found.
I knew immediately that suspicion was going to be pointed directly at Nancy. What I loved about the story is that we’re given the answer to this mystery right away, even though we don’t know the why or whom. It’s what made it compelling as there are little clues given to people in the town that on their own don’t seem meaningful but to us? We know it’s relevant and are on the sidelines just praying that someone assembles them and figures this thing out.
My book club selected this as a tribute to the author, who died in January. I recall reading Mary Higgins Clark when I was a young teen and loved her stories but somehow missed this one. This was her debut fiction novel and it doesn’t feel like a first-time effort. I’m also glad I chose to listen to it, and though it was the first audio version (found an old used copy), the narrator delivered an excellent performance. She had my nerves on edge from the very beginning and her pacing was perfect. Lastly, while this was written in 1975, there’s not a thing about it that feels dated. This story is timeless.
Una novela de intriga muy interesante. Me encanta como esta autora realiza la narrativa a través de los diversos personajes a través de cortos capítulos, en donde solo quieres pasar páginas para saber más y conocer al culpable. Son libros adictivos.
I think I've gotten pickier as I've gotten older. I devoured Mary Higgins Clark's novels when I was in junior high and high school. I loved being a little scared and trying to figure out who the killer was. (I think that may have been a carryover from my elementary-aged love of Agatha Christie novels.) I didn't have as much fun with this one.
I picked up this book at the library because I hadn't read a novel like this in ages. And now I kind of remember why. As enjoyable as the story was (who doesn't like a mystery every once in a while?), there was no characterization. The main characters could have been anybody on the street. I had no tie to them and no reason to care about them, other than that their two little kids were missing, which obviously tore at my heart. Clark also has no eye for detail. There would be scenes where I thought only two people were in the room, and suddenly a third person was talking and I couldn't figure out where in the world they came from.
Clark also has absolutely no subtlety when it comes to foreshadowing. A character discovers that his neighbor Nancy Eldredge is actually Nancy Harmon, who was convicted of killing her two children seven years earlier and got off on a technicality. Only after this character figures that out do we start hearing about how Nancy always looked familiar to him. I need to hear about those nagging little inklings before they're realized, not after.
Also, Clark freaking SUCKS at writing children's dialogue. She just does. Every novel of hers that includes a child has the worst and most stilted dialogue. I have never heard any child speak like the kids in her books.
Basically, my editing brain would not shut up during this whole novel. I just couldn't make that voice in my head go away. It kept telling me to make this change, and make that change, and ask the author what the crap is going on here...
All these years later, I still believe this is one of my absolute favorite suspense thrillers ever. I think I was about 13 or 14 when my mother went on a Mary Higgins Clark buying binge and this was the second of MHC's books that I read.
The story of a young mother who has the unthinkable happen... her children go missing but as the police begin their investigation they realize it isn't the first time.
Let's face it, your children going missing is any parent's nightmare. I always thought Mary Higgins Clark was brilliant in planting little seeds of doubt in the reader while at the same time giving us so many different character perspectives including the perpetrator. All I know is that no matter how many times I have read this book, I always hold my breath until we find Michael and Missy.
I can absolutely see how this book would have been amazing at the time of its release. However, for today’s audience I found it a bit trite with the weak and docile expectations for women. The crying and confusion felt like an archetype of a 1960’s housewife. Aside from that, I’m sure this topic was groundbreaking in its day and am thankful it paved the way for being able to discuss facets of abuse.
Nancy Harmon long ago fled the heartbreak of her first marriage, the macabre deaths of her two little children, and the shocking charges against her. She changed her name, dyed her hair, and left California for the windswept peace of Cape Cod. Now remarried, she has two more beloved children, and the terrible pain has begun to heal -- until the morning when she looks in the backyard for her little boy and girl and finds only one red mitten. She knows that the nightmare is beginning again....
🌎📖OVERALL REVIEWS📖🌎 Courtesy of Storygraph
COMMUNITY REVIEWS SUMMARY OF 1,914 REVIEWS
Moods mysterious 82% dark 81% tense 80% emotional 41% sad 23% challenging 13% adventurous 10% hopeful 4% reflective 3% informative 1% Pace fast 70% medium 25% slow 4% Plot- or character-driven? Plot: 61% | A mix: 29% | Character: 8% | N/A: 1% Strong character development? No: 40% | Yes: 33% | It's complicated: 21% | N/A: 4% Loveable characters? It's complicated: 48% | No: 26% | Yes: 23% | N/A: 1% Diverse cast of characters? No: 82% | Yes: 13% | It's complicated: 2% | N/A: 1% Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes: 50% | No: 24% | It's complicated: 23% | N/A: 2% Average rating 3.8
🤔🧐🤯MY THOUGHTS:🤯🧐🤔
OMG! This was much better than I thought it would be! SO GOOD!! And that ending…👩🏻🍳😚 chef’s kiss!! Now I want to read the sequel to this and I will definitely be adding more Mary Higgins Clark books to my reading diet!! Bad pun, I know 😏. If you decide to read this, Bon Appetit!!
RATING KEY:
🌟 Stars - based on the overall plot and theme or idea of the book ❤️🩹 Emotions - based on how emotional I got while reading 🥰 Romance - based on how well I got invested in the love story aspect 🌶️ Spice - based on how the sex scenes were portrayed and written as well as the number of sex scenes 🔎 Mystery - based on how well it kept me guessing who, how and why 😰 Scared/Anxious - based on how scared or anxious the book made me while reading 🎭 Comedy/Tragedy- based on if I laughed or if there was a tragic event and how it affected me. I will mark the Masks with either a C or T to indicate Comedy or Tragedy 👻 Spooky/Creepy -based on if this had any occult or paranormal themes and if those elements creeped me out or gave me anxiety!
I took the plunge! I read my first book by the Queen of Suspense, Mary Higgins Clark!
It was a case of #bookstagrammademedoit and I was glad I took a chance. I was impressed with how the author planted seeds of doubt and how she mastered multiple points of view.
Inspired by the New York Alice Crimmins case, MHC wrote about a beautiful young mother who was accused and later convicted of murdering her two young children. Upon her case being overturned due to a technicality, she’s released from prison, relocates, remarries, and embarks upon a new life. Then seven years to the day marking the death of her two children, the two children from her second marriage disappear. Is something sinister at play here? Is it the mother? Or has the real murderer come back?
I’ll be honest and admit to being a little freaked out. It was definitely a little edgier than the psychological thrillers I normally read. I’ll also admit to not connecting to any of the characters and being disappointed at the predictability of the plot. Regardless, this is the author’s debut book and it’s obvious that she’d perfected her skills, going on to be an accomplished author. I think I’m curious enough to read the much-anticipated sequel recently published.
Very dated, and not in a classic or vintage way, kind of like those mile high, teased- up bangs in the eighties. Not a good look on anyone. Filled with annoying tropes and beyond kitschy dialogue. If you’re looking for classic, atmospheric suspense, read Daphne DuMaurier, not this. My book club read it because the author recently passed away, and the setting for this novel is local for us.
Mary Higgins Clark based her first suspense novel on the real life case of Alice Crimmins. Alice was a beautiful young mother who dominated the news in 1965 when she was accused of murdering her two young children. Mary Higgins Clark read about the case and as she explained in the forward of the book she based Where are the Children? on her suppositions of Alice's life after she was finally paroled.
In this story Alice is reimagined as Nancy Elderage a young woman who was tried for the murder of her own two children, Peter and Lisa. After her husband commits suicide and she is released from prison she starts life over in Cape Cod. She remarries and has two more children Michael and Missy with her new husband Ray Eldridge. One day the children disappear while playing outside and when her past is conveniently revealed in the town's newspaper on the day of the disappearance suspicion naturally falls on her.
I picked this book up because I saw a piece on Many Higgins Clark on CBS Sunday morning. I was so impressed with her life story and the book's connection to a real crime that I wanted to read it. The book is so specific to the 1970's. It's a real time trip. As for the mystery itself it was quite well thought out if somewhat predictable. The topic of pedophilia was not discussed much in the 70's so I can imagine the topic of this book was quite shocking when it came out. Overall it was a quick and enjoyable read. I also enjoyed learning more about Mary Higgins Clark. When her children were quite young her husband died leaving her the sole breadwinner of her family. She decided to become an author to support her family and despite many rejections and the failure of her first book she preserved to eventually become the Queen of the suspense thriller. If you would like to lean more about Mary Higgins Clark, her interview with CBS can be found here: http://www.cbsnews.com/news/mary-higg...
I came across this book when I was in high school. I borrowed it, read it and returned it the next day...
I was horrified, chilled and appalled at the way the main female character was treated, but equally amazed and thrilled at the ending which allowed her to twist the dirty deeds of her tormenter back on himself.
One of the reasons this subgenre became so popular was that until the 1970s (and the movie "The Burning Bed") very few people were willing to admit that a man could hurt his wife. In this book the audience - the readers - see that it is all too easy for a man to do so, especially when he appears to be suave and good and nice.
I recently read another Clark book and it had a different theme, but was based on a twisted phsyche as well.
Gosto muito da escrita desta autora, infelizmente falecida recentemente. Mas este livro não me prendeu particularmente. Apesar de pequeno e de leitura fácil, a história não me prendeu e achei simples demais. Mas não desisto dos livros desta autora fabulosa
Eletrizante !!!! Não se consegue largar até ao fim!!! Adoro esta escritora, este foi o primeiro livro dela e está excecional. Com este livro terminei o meu Goodreads challenge 💚💚 venha 2020!!!!
یک داستان جنایی هیجان انگیز که تا تمومش نکنی نمیتونی بگذاریش کنار. داستان در مورد زنی هست که در هفتمین سالگرد کشته شدن بچه هاش، دو تا بچه ی دیگه ش گم میشن. برای خواننده ای که جنایی زیاد خونده، به قدری سرنخ از قاتلِ آدم ربا هست که سریع تشخیصش بده. با این وجود همچنان جذاب و هیجان انگیزه.
شخصیت "ری" خیلی دوست داشتنی بود. پدری که بچه هاش گم شدن و همسرش مظنون اصلیه. اون حتی نمیدونه که آیا بچه هاش رو بار دیگه میبینه یا نه اما از همسرش حمایت میکنه. در حقیقت نمی خواد همسرش رو هم از دست بده.
Este livro merece as cinco estrelas inteiras. Um livro que não tem assim tantas páginas mas que todas são carregadas de mistério que se completa num thriller brilhante. Tem todos os ingredientes essenciais, sem perder o interesse nem por um segundo. Esta autora nunca deixa de surpreender.
MHC has a way of writing that completely engrosses you. This is a re-read for me (before i read the sequel) and i am just as invested in it as i was the first time around. I am not a mother and i can not imagine what Nancy is going through - but i feel her pain in MHC’s writing. She uses intricacies and multiple characters/POVs throughout the narrative and still makes it all tie together beautifully in the end. This is what a lot of authors try to do and fail. I was on the edge of my seat and flew through this one. If you haven’t read MHC before- this is a great one to start with.
Haven't read any of Mary Higgins Clark's books in quiet a while. After reading this one I realized again why I love her writing. Throughout the whole book I was trying to figure out who the kidnapper/murderer was and what happened to Mack. Every time I thought I was right I was proven wrong. Her books are so easy to read and flow nicely through the chapters.
Apesar de este ser o primeiro livro da escritora, apesar de ter só 200 páginas este livro a meu ver é um policial fantástico. Tenho pena de não ter conseguido ler de seguida... Adorei e recomendo vivamente.
Unfassbar, welche gymnastischen Übungen MHC dem Zufall in WINTERSSTURM abverlangt; tagelang wird das Schicksal nach diesen Dehnübungen massiver Muskelkater geplagt haben. Nicht minder strapaziert wird die Gutgläubigkeit des Lesers, wenn an einem einzigen Tage, dem Geburtstag von Nancy, ihre zwei Kinder entführt werden, ein ehemaliger erpresserischer Belastungszeuge nach Jahren wieder auftaucht und ein griechischer Gastronom just die Immobilie besichtigt, in dem die Kinder gefangen gehalten werden. Übrigens ist die dabei anwesende Maklerin eine Partnerin des Vaters der Kinder, und wem es an Zufällen noch nicht reicht, der freue sich darüber, dass an diesemTage X gerade ein Jurist den Fall er ersten Kindestötungen studiert hat – denn vor sieben Jahren sind schon einmal zwei Kinder Nancys getötet worden und sie geriet unter Tatverdacht, und nun genau wie ein hinzu geeilter Arzt, der Nancys Mutter liebte, der Armen zur Hilfe springt.
Wollte man in die Details gehen, so werden diese Zufälle immer haarsträubender und legen die Vermutung nahe, dass MHC für ihren ersten Thriller zahlreiche Einfälle hatte, sich nicht entscheiden konnte und schließlich alle bunt kombiniert hat. Dabei wird der Leser nicht gefordert, im Stile eines Who-Dunnit zu mutmaßen, wer der Entführer ist, denn das erfährt er gleich auf der ersten Seite, sondern die Spannung resultiert aus der Frage, ob die gekidnappten Kinder dieses Mal gerettet werden können. WINTERSTURM richtet sich an Leser, die vorzugsweise lieber mitfühlen als mitdenken.
Dialoge und Charaktere kommen lauwarm daher und die Spannung hält sich in Grenzen. Überzeugend ist nur der eisige Sturm, der über Cape Cod tost und für Gänsehautfeeling sorgt.
Foi, pura e simplesmente, incrível! A história faz-nos dar voltas e voltas à cabeça, a tentar juntar peças, a pensar "hum... Foi aquele" "afinal parece que não. Deve ser este". Até que, a 1/4 do final do livro... Oh meu deus! A sério? Nunca pensei!! E é nesta altura que as pessoas também começam a desvendar peças que faltavam e que eles percebem quem realmente foi. E depois é uma correria frenética para salvar as crianças. Foram 200 pag fantasticas! Adorei cada uma! E Nancy e Ray formam um casal de sonho! Estamos, sem dúvida, sob um excelente romance policial. Estava com as expectativas baixas e surpreendeu-me imenso!
Where Are the Children is a lamentable novel. Mary Higgins Clark shows off an almost staggering propensity for telling instead of showing, generalizing instead of offering specificity, and sloshing on the melodrama at every turn. The plot is clumsy, fraught with implausible coincidence despite being prosaically simple, and so littered with red herring, unnecessary clues, all of which would have comfortably led the characters toward the solution of the mystery, that I actually found myself pitying the antagonist by the end—not exactly rooting for him, but ruing his profound and embarrassing ineptitude.
On the plus side, Clark delves into pedophilia in a manner that is not wholly one-dimensional, and the various pieces of the story fit together reasonably well, such that events from the past seem to foreshadow and reinforce events in the present. That's about all I can say in support of this book. The plot isn't terrible, but the characterization, setting, pacing, descriptions—are all so poorly rendered that the book is altogether painful to read. Given all of that, how did this book launch the career of such a successful and illustrious mystery writer? All I can think is that the writing is just so easy to read—so mindless and devoid of challenge—that it acts sort of like day-time TV, drawing in a dazed audience to sit rapt and attentive because of the pure vacuousness of the experience.
I'm actually quite unhappy to have to slam this novel. I picked it up with significant reservation, having had forewarning that Clark was not a good writer. However, I am from Cape Cod—born and raised—and my older brother had a bit part (with a single line) in the cinematic version of this novel, I guess picked up as an extra because they filmed it on location where we lived. I was hopeful that there would be some fun descriptions of the Cape that would evoke a clear sense of place and that the minor characters and stores and architecture would feel nostalgic. Alas... There are so many books so much more engaging and thought-provoking and fun and funny and genuinely dramatic and memorable than this one, I would advise readers to give this a decisive pass.
This is a book for you that like mysteries, if you like them, you will be out of breath while reading this book. Nancy Harmon had fled her first marriage and the terrible and evil death of her two children. After going through an entire lawsuit, she changes her name and dyes her hair. She moves to the Cape Cod where she gets married again. There, she gives birth to a boy and a girl, and a few years later she checks her backyard and notices that a nightmare was beginning again. Where are the Children? has splendid utilization of pacing, perspective, a surprising turn, and out of request demonstrations of recounting stories. Clark moves back and forth between the past abduction and the present one, building anticipation by attempting to make you set up the pieces from the earliest starting point. Throughout this whole book I was curious and couldn't stop reading. The book was very well written and had me turning the pages as fast as I could. It is all about plotting and characterization. The plots weave a very interesting story and the characters are so real as the net closes in on the criminal and only at the end is his surprising identity told about. A mind blowing and thrilling story that I recommend. The characters are well developed in the story, and the "stories in the story" make the book even more interesting.
Mary Higgins Clark is a best seller for a reason - and that is she is predictable, not necessarily in plot or style but in that her books are readable and enjoyable - yes there may be a formula you quickly get the feel for and the characters may sometimes feel like they have been lifted right out of one story in to the next - but still they are well written and fun reads. I didnt realise how much I had been drawn in to the story until I realised how few pages there were left in the book. And even though the story is quite traumatic (I think any storyline with children treads the line between being disturbing and annoying - I hate the whiny crying children who just want to sit there and annoy you, thankfully here they were not and in fact full on for being what I think are realistic and believable kids) So I will admit as a change of pace and flavour this was as good as any and for me Mary Higgins Clark at her best.
I'm not much of a thriller reader, I prefer mysteries that I have to puzzle out. But this book is a makes me reexamine that bias. I was sure was the person who killed The book was very well written and had me turning the pages as fast as I could. This 45 year old book also made me realize I'm never going to be able to read all the great books before I shuffle off this mortal coil. I want to be reincarnated as a librarian.
Not my thing but very well done. Fast-paced, hard to put down. Not a deep character study. Not a mystery. But a...domestic thriller? I'm not sure what to call it. It moves as fast as a Patterson (and I suspect he studied some of the author's techniques at some point) but stays grounded in home and family. What I don't like about it is that it's a button-pusher, not so much focused on telling a story as provoking the reader. It does that sort of thing very well--but again, not my thing.
A very gripping story that you won't want to put down. I found it to be very unsettling as any child endangerment will make me queasy. I would be inclined to try some of her other novels as I enjoyed her writing style.