Before She Knew Him: A Novel

Before She Knew Him: A Novel

by Peter Swanson

Narrated by Sophie Amoss, Graham Halstead

Unabridged — 10 hours, 15 minutes

Before She Knew Him: A Novel

Before She Knew Him: A Novel

by Peter Swanson

Narrated by Sophie Amoss, Graham Halstead

Unabridged — 10 hours, 15 minutes

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Overview

Catching a killer is dangerous-especially if he lives next door

From the hugely talented author of The Kind Worth Killing comes an exquisitely chilling tale of a young suburban wife with a history of psychological instability whose fears about her new neighbor could lead them both to murder . . .

Hen and her husband Lloyd have settled into a quiet life in a new house outside of Boston, Massachusetts. Hen (short for Henrietta) is an illustrator and works out of a studio nearby, and has found the right meds to control her bipolar disorder. Finally, she's found some stability and peace.

But when they meet the neighbors next door, that calm begins to erode as she spots a familiar object displayed on the husband's office shelf. The sports trophy looks exactly like one that went missing from the home of a young man who was killed two years ago. Hen knows because she's long had a fascination with this unsolved murder-an obsession she doesn't talk about anymore, but can't fully shake either.

Could her neighbor, Matthew, be a killer? Or is this the beginning of another psychotic episode like the one she suffered back in college, when she became so consumed with proving a fellow student guilty that she ended up hurting a classmate?

The more Hen observes Matthew, the more she suspects he's planning something truly terrifying. Yet no one will believe her. Then one night, when she comes face to face with Matthew in a dark parking lot, she realizes that he knows she's been watching him, that she's really on to him. And that this is the beginning of a horrifying nightmare she may not live to escape. . .


Editorial Reviews

JUNE 2019 - AudioFile

Sophie Amoss and Graham Halstead team up to narrate this twisty thriller about Hen, a bipolar artist who’s convinced she’s solved a cold case murder. Because of her illness, however, neither the police nor her husband completely believes her—especially when she accuses her neighbor, a well-respected high school teacher. Amoss, who performs the majority of the audiobook, is careful to avoid foreshadowing, leaving listeners to question whether Hen is mentally stable or undergoing a manic episode. Amoss’s soft, youthful voice is a foil to the building tension as Hen’s snooping becomes more reckless. Halstead narrates a couple of first-person interludes with a dispassionate delivery, adding another creepy dimension. Listeners will be guessing right up to the end of this psychological suspense. C.B.L. © AudioFile 2019, Portland, Maine

Publishers Weekly

★ 01/28/2019

At the start of this exceptional psychological thriller from Swanson (All the Beautiful Lies), bipolar Hen “Henrietta” Mazur and her husband, Lloyd Harding, have dinner one night at the suburban Boston home of neighbors Mira and Matt Dolamore, with whom they’ve recently bonded over their mutual childlessness. At one point, Hen spots a fencing trophy on their hosts’ fireplace mantel that she believes was won by Dustin Miller, a college student who was murdered two years earlier and who attended the high school where Matt teaches history. Matt claims that he bought the trophy at a yard sale, but Hen, who’s become obsessed with Dustin’s case, suspects that Matt killed Dustin. The next day, when she visits the Dolamores, the trophy is missing, reinforcing her suspicions. However, Hen gets little support from Lloyd or the police because of her history of mental health problems and of falsely accusing others of murder. An uneasy relationship soon develops between Hen and Matt, whose traumatic childhood adds emotional heft to the narrative. Surprising twists help keep the suspense high to the end. Agent: Nat Sobel, Sobel Weber Assoc. (Mar.)

From the Publisher

Mr. Swanson unfolds this creepy story with the assurance and economy of a master. Surprises follow one another with inevitability, until the final electrifying jolt.” — Wall Street Journal

“[A] neatly knotted suspense story.” — New York Times Book Review

“In trademark style, Swanson’s ingenious plotting throws up tantalising clues and then slowly unravels them through a series of shocking revelations, leaving readers confused, bemused and racing to the last page. Compelling, creepy, and psychologically astute, this is stylish thriller writing at its very best.” — Guardian (UK)

“A twisty, fast-paced tale that depicts picket-fence suburbia’s seamy, murderous underside… Swanson is at his best in exploring the kinship—or what some see as the kinship—between artist and killer, one of the themes of Swanson’s great model and forebear, Patricia Highsmith… A dark, quick-moving, suspenseful story.” — Kirkus Reviews

“It is deliciously good – dry, intelligent, perfectly paced, [and] there is more than a touch of the Barbara Vines about the delicately played out, deliciously dark relationship that develops between Hen and Matthew… This is Swanson’s best thriller yet.” — The Observer (UK)

“Plenty of suspense and surprises... This intense and sinister thriller builds to a shocking conclusion as the bizarre relationship between a woman and her killer neighbor plays out.” — ShelfAwareness.com

“There’s a neat twist at the end, but the real surprise is the way characters are allowed to grieve their losses, a luxury not always allowed in stories of this type. For a fast-paced thriller, Before She Knew Him achieves an impressive significance in its pauses.” — BookPage

“Swanson builds the tension to a nearly unbearable level... The detail he uses as he delves into their lives and psyches foreshadows the stunners to follow… A cornucopia of carnage and craziness, Before She Knew Him simultaneously disturbs and delights.” — The Free Lance-Star (Fredericksburg, VA)

“A wicked thriller that does not disappoint… Another gem that pulls the reader in and never lets go, even as the story comes to a close. This is a book that will keep you up at night and haunt your thoughts. A fun, chilling read.” — Manhattan Book Review

“Woven into this twisty-turny murder thriller is mental illness and the instability it causes. Maybe worse than not being able to rely on yourself is that other people might not believe you. How can they be sure you’re not being paranoid, or manic, or obsessive?” — The Big Thrill

“The narrative trickery is bold, but reined-in… As in all his best work, Swanson is equally beguiling when conjuring up the mind of a sociopath and the middle class Eden that harbors him.” — The Sunday Times (UK)

“What would you do if you began to suspect your next door neighbor was a serial killer? That is the dilemma faced by artist Hen - and the jumping off point for this very contemporary thriller that will keep you gripped through every elegant twist and turn.” — Sunday Mirror (UK)

“This acutely perceptive writer has become a master of psychological chills and thrills, transforming what appears to be ‘cosy domestic’ into something infinitely more dangerous and deadly… A sizzling slice of his unique brand of domestic noir… Tingling with tension [and] brimming with menace.” — The Guardian (UK)

“In Peter Swanson’s expert hands, one woman’s discerning observation at a quiet suburban dinner party unfolds into a gripping, twisty, psychologically complex thriller.  I could not put it down.” — Alafair Burke, New York Times bestselling author of The Wife

“What would happen if a serial killer met the perfect confidant, someone who would never be believed if they revealed his secrets? Nothing good… Swanson has crafted another bar-raising psychological thriller with this tense, unexpected spin on serial killers and those obsessed with them.” — Booklist

Praise for All the Beautiful Lies:
“Suspense lovers will devour this deliciously duplicitous read, which is chock-full of twists, turns, lust, greed, and dishonesty.” — Library Journal on All the Beautiful Lies

“Swanson’s fourth psychological thriller is a gripping exploration of delusion and deceit; sure to please readers of Laura Lippman’s stand-alones.” — Booklist on All the Beautiful Lies

“Complex [and] intriguing… [Swanson] makes sure to place those twists and turns perfectly... And when someone else turns up dead, the story goes from 0-to-60 in a split-second. Peter Swanson has done a fantastic job.” — Suspense Magazine on All the Beautiful Lies

“Swanson has drawn on Alfred Hitchcock to good effect. In All the Beautiful Lies, he looks instead to du Maurier… The reader is soon gripped and wondering which will come first: Harry’s seduction or his death? Swanson’s magpie borrowings are always finessed into something fresh and piquant.” — The Guardian

“An explosive mix of seductions, obsessions, and dark secrets.” — New York Journal of Books on All the Beautiful Lies

“There are many twists and turns, and quite a few surprises along the way…. A solid, twisty work of suspense.” — PCA/ACA Mystery & Detective Fiction Reading List on All the Beautiful Lies

“Gripping… [Alice’s] past is peppered with secrets and the damage is revealed in a split narrative between now and then, culminating in an edge of the seat ending.” — Sunday Post (UK) on All the Beautiful Lies

“This atmospheric, stylish mystery is pure pleasure.” — Sunday Mirror (UK) on All the Beautiful Lies

The Girl with a Clock for a Heart is a twisty, sexy, electric thrill ride and an absolute blast from start to finish.” — Dennis Lehane

“This devilishly clever noir thriller could have been called “Strangers on a Plane.” … It would have made a great Hitchcock movie.… Unlike most books that fail to live up to the hype, this one makes good on the promise, right down to the chilling final paragraph.” — Fort Worth Star-Telegram

“The Year’s Best Fiction: … A taut thriller with a mounting body count and a final twist so ruthlessly clever it’s criminal.” — Entertainment Weekly on The Kind Worth Killing

“The spirit of film noir is alive in this twisty tale of an ordinary man whose life is disrupted by his first love—an old-fashioned femme fatale who brings double crossings, financial scams and murder in her devastating wake. Clever and stylish.” — Sunday Mirror (UK) on The Girl With a Clock For a Heart

“The skillfully conjured Boston winter creates the perfect atmosphere for breeding paranoia, which kicks into high gear with the introduction of Cherney’s Rear Window-like flashbacks. Swanson … introduces a delicious monster-under-the-bed creepiness to the expected top-notch characterization and steadily mounting anxiety.” — Booklist (starred review) on Her Every Fear

The Big Thrill

Woven into this twisty-turny murder thriller is mental illness and the instability it causes. Maybe worse than not being able to rely on yourself is that other people might not believe you. How can they be sure you’re not being paranoid, or manic, or obsessive?

Guardian (UK)

In trademark style, Swanson’s ingenious plotting throws up tantalising clues and then slowly unravels them through a series of shocking revelations, leaving readers confused, bemused and racing to the last page. Compelling, creepy, and psychologically astute, this is stylish thriller writing at its very best.

Manhattan Book Review

A wicked thriller that does not disappoint… Another gem that pulls the reader in and never lets go, even as the story comes to a close. This is a book that will keep you up at night and haunt your thoughts. A fun, chilling read.

Wall Street Journal

Mr. Swanson unfolds this creepy story with the assurance and economy of a master. Surprises follow one another with inevitability, until the final electrifying jolt.

The Observer (UK)

It is deliciously good – dry, intelligent, perfectly paced, [and] there is more than a touch of the Barbara Vines about the delicately played out, deliciously dark relationship that develops between Hen and Matthew… This is Swanson’s best thriller yet.

New York Times Book Review

[A] neatly knotted suspense story.

The Free Lance-Star (Fredericksburg

Swanson builds the tension to a nearly unbearable level... The detail he uses as he delves into their lives and psyches foreshadows the stunners to follow… A cornucopia of carnage and craziness, Before She Knew Him simultaneously disturbs and delights.

BookPage

There’s a neat twist at the end, but the real surprise is the way characters are allowed to grieve their losses, a luxury not always allowed in stories of this type. For a fast-paced thriller, Before She Knew Him achieves an impressive significance in its pauses.

ShelfAwareness.com

Plenty of suspense and surprises... This intense and sinister thriller builds to a shocking conclusion as the bizarre relationship between a woman and her killer neighbor plays out.

Sunday Post (UK) on All the Beautiful Lies

Gripping… [Alice’s] past is peppered with secrets and the damage is revealed in a split narrative between now and then, culminating in an edge of the seat ending.

Booklist

What would happen if a serial killer met the perfect confidant, someone who would never be believed if they revealed his secrets? Nothing good… Swanson has crafted another bar-raising psychological thriller with this tense, unexpected spin on serial killers and those obsessed with them.

PCA/ACA Mystery & Detective Fiction Reading List on All the Beautiful Lies

There are many twists and turns, and quite a few surprises along the way…. A solid, twisty work of suspense.

Suspense Magazine on All the Beautiful Lies

Complex [and] intriguing… [Swanson] makes sure to place those twists and turns perfectly... And when someone else turns up dead, the story goes from 0-to-60 in a split-second. Peter Swanson has done a fantastic job.

Fort Worth Star-Telegram

This devilishly clever noir thriller could have been called “Strangers on a Plane.” … It would have made a great Hitchcock movie.… Unlike most books that fail to live up to the hype, this one makes good on the promise, right down to the chilling final paragraph.

The Guardian (UK)

This acutely perceptive writer has become a master of psychological chills and thrills, transforming what appears to be ‘cosy domestic’ into something infinitely more dangerous and deadly… A sizzling slice of his unique brand of domestic noir… Tingling with tension [and] brimming with menace.

The Sunday Times (UK)

The narrative trickery is bold, but reined-in… As in all his best work, Swanson is equally beguiling when conjuring up the mind of a sociopath and the middle class Eden that harbors him.

Booklist (starred review) on Her Every Fear

The skillfully conjured Boston winter creates the perfect atmosphere for breeding paranoia, which kicks into high gear with the introduction of Cherney’s Rear Window-like flashbacks. Swanson … introduces a delicious monster-under-the-bed creepiness to the expected top-notch characterization and steadily mounting anxiety.

Booklist on All the Beautiful Lies

Swanson’s fourth psychological thriller is a gripping exploration of delusion and deceit; sure to please readers of Laura Lippman’s stand-alones.

Sunday Mirror (UK) on The Girl With a Clock For a Heart

The spirit of film noir is alive in this twisty tale of an ordinary man whose life is disrupted by his first love—an old-fashioned femme fatale who brings double crossings, financial scams and murder in her devastating wake. Clever and stylish.

Sunday Mirror (UK) on All the Beautiful Lies

This atmospheric, stylish mystery is pure pleasure.

Alafair Burke

In Peter Swanson’s expert hands, one woman’s discerning observation at a quiet suburban dinner party unfolds into a gripping, twisty, psychologically complex thriller.  I could not put it down.

Sunday Mirror (UK)

What would you do if you began to suspect your next door neighbor was a serial killer? That is the dilemma faced by artist Hen - and the jumping off point for this very contemporary thriller that will keep you gripped through every elegant twist and turn.

New York Journal of Books on All the Beautiful Lies

An explosive mix of seductions, obsessions, and dark secrets.

Dennis Lehane

The Girl with a Clock for a Heart is a twisty, sexy, electric thrill ride and an absolute blast from start to finish.

Entertainment Weekly on The Kind Worth Killing

The Year’s Best Fiction: … A taut thriller with a mounting body count and a final twist so ruthlessly clever it’s criminal.

The Guardian

Swanson has drawn on Alfred Hitchcock to good effect. In All the Beautiful Lies, he looks instead to du Maurier… The reader is soon gripped and wondering which will come first: Harry’s seduction or his death? Swanson’s magpie borrowings are always finessed into something fresh and piquant.

Wall Street Journal

Mr. Swanson unfolds this creepy story with the assurance and economy of a master. Surprises follow one another with inevitability, until the final electrifying jolt.

Booklist

What would happen if a serial killer met the perfect confidant, someone who would never be believed if they revealed his secrets? Nothing good… Swanson has crafted another bar-raising psychological thriller with this tense, unexpected spin on serial killers and those obsessed with them.

Booklist on Her Every Fear

The skillfully conjured Boston winter creates the perfect atmosphere for breeding paranoia, which kicks into high gear with the introduction of Cherney’s Rear Window-like flashbacks. Swanson … introduces a delicious monster-under-the-bed creepiness to the expected top-notch characterization and steadily mounting anxiety.

null New York Journal of Books on All the Beautiful Lies

An explosive mix of seductions, obsessions, and dark secrets.

Booklist

What would happen if a serial killer met the perfect confidant, someone who would never be believed if they revealed his secrets? Nothing good… Swanson has crafted another bar-raising psychological thriller with this tense, unexpected spin on serial killers and those obsessed with them.

The Guardian

Swanson has drawn on Alfred Hitchcock to good effect. In All the Beautiful Lies, he looks instead to du Maurier… The reader is soon gripped and wondering which will come first: Harry’s seduction or his death? Swanson’s magpie borrowings are always finessed into something fresh and piquant.

The Sunday Times (UK)

The narrative trickery is bold, but reined-in… As in all his best work, Swanson is equally beguiling when conjuring up the mind of a sociopath and the middle class Eden that harbors him.

Booklist on Her Every Fear

The skillfully conjured Boston winter creates the perfect atmosphere for breeding paranoia, which kicks into high gear with the introduction of Cherney’s Rear Window-like flashbacks. Swanson … introduces a delicious monster-under-the-bed creepiness to the expected top-notch characterization and steadily mounting anxiety.

Suspense Magazine on All the Beautiful Lies

Complex [and] intriguing… [Swanson] makes sure to place those twists and turns perfectly... And when someone else turns up dead, the story goes from 0-to-60 in a split-second. Peter Swanson has done a fantastic job.

New York Journal of Books on All the Beautiful Lies

An explosive mix of seductions, obsessions, and dark secrets.

The Big Thrill

Woven into this twisty-turny murder thriller is mental illness and the instability it causes. Maybe worse than not being able to rely on yourself is that other people might not believe you. How can they be sure you’re not being paranoid, or manic, or obsessive?

Booklist on All the Beautiful Lies

Swanson’s fourth psychological thriller is a gripping exploration of delusion and deceit; sure to please readers of Laura Lippman’s stand-alones.

Sunday Mirror (UK) on The Girl With a Clock For a Heart

The spirit of film noir is alive in this twisty tale of an ordinary man whose life is disrupted by his first love—an old-fashioned femme fatale who brings double crossings, financial scams and murder in her devastating wake. Clever and stylish.

Manhattan Book Review

A wicked thriller that does not disappoint… Another gem that pulls the reader in and never lets go, even as the story comes to a close. This is a book that will keep you up at night and haunt your thoughts. A fun, chilling read.

New York Times Book Review

[A] neatly knotted suspense story.

BookPage

There’s a neat twist at the end, but the real surprise is the way characters are allowed to grieve their losses, a luxury not always allowed in stories of this type. For a fast-paced thriller, Before She Knew Him achieves an impressive significance in its pauses.

Wall Street Journal

Mr. Swanson unfolds this creepy story with the assurance and economy of a master. Surprises follow one another with inevitability, until the final electrifying jolt.

Sunday Mirror (UK)

What would you do if you began to suspect your next door neighbor was a serial killer? That is the dilemma faced by artist Hen - and the jumping off point for this very contemporary thriller that will keep you gripped through every elegant twist and turn.

Entertainment Weekly on The Kind Worth Killing

The Year’s Best Fiction: … A taut thriller with a mounting body count and a final twist so ruthlessly clever it’s criminal.

Fort Worth Star-Telegram

This devilishly clever noir thriller could have been called “Strangers on a Plane.” … It would have made a great Hitchcock movie.… Unlike most books that fail to live up to the hype, this one makes good on the promise, right down to the chilling final paragraph.

Guardian (UK)

In trademark style, Swanson’s ingenious plotting throws up tantalising clues and then slowly unravels them through a series of shocking revelations, leaving readers confused, bemused and racing to the last page. Compelling, creepy, and psychologically astute, this is stylish thriller writing at its very best.

The Free Lance-Star (Fredericksburg

Swanson builds the tension to a nearly unbearable level... The detail he uses as he delves into their lives and psyches foreshadows the stunners to follow… A cornucopia of carnage and craziness, Before She Knew Him simultaneously disturbs and delights.

Sunday Post (UK) on All the Beautiful Lies

Gripping… [Alice’s] past is peppered with secrets and the damage is revealed in a split narrative between now and then, culminating in an edge of the seat ending.

The Guardian (UK)

This acutely perceptive writer has become a master of psychological chills and thrills, transforming what appears to be ‘cosy domestic’ into something infinitely more dangerous and deadly… A sizzling slice of his unique brand of domestic noir… Tingling with tension [and] brimming with menace.

PCA/ACA Mystery & Detective Fiction Reading List on All the Beautiful Lies

There are many twists and turns, and quite a few surprises along the way…. A solid, twisty work of suspense.

ShelfAwareness.com

Plenty of suspense and surprises... This intense and sinister thriller builds to a shocking conclusion as the bizarre relationship between a woman and her killer neighbor plays out.

Sunday Mirror (UK) on All the Beautiful Lies

This atmospheric, stylish mystery is pure pleasure.

Dennis Lehane

The Girl with a Clock for a Heart is a twisty, sexy, electric thrill ride and an absolute blast from start to finish.

The Observer (UK)

It is deliciously good – dry, intelligent, perfectly paced, [and] there is more than a touch of the Barbara Vines about the delicately played out, deliciously dark relationship that develops between Hen and Matthew… This is Swanson’s best thriller yet.

PCA/ACA Mystery &Detective Fiction Reading List on All the Beautiful Lies

There are many twists and turns, and quite a few surprises along the way…. A solid, twisty work of suspense.

The National (UK)

[Swanson] knows how to ration his twists and where in the narrative to place them, devoting just the right amount of time to exploring the ramifications of each new development before spinning the story off in an ominous new direction… De Palma, or Hitchcock… would kill for the film rights.

JUNE 2019 - AudioFile

Sophie Amoss and Graham Halstead team up to narrate this twisty thriller about Hen, a bipolar artist who’s convinced she’s solved a cold case murder. Because of her illness, however, neither the police nor her husband completely believes her—especially when she accuses her neighbor, a well-respected high school teacher. Amoss, who performs the majority of the audiobook, is careful to avoid foreshadowing, leaving listeners to question whether Hen is mentally stable or undergoing a manic episode. Amoss’s soft, youthful voice is a foil to the building tension as Hen’s snooping becomes more reckless. Halstead narrates a couple of first-person interludes with a dispassionate delivery, adding another creepy dimension. Listeners will be guessing right up to the end of this psychological suspense. C.B.L. © AudioFile 2019, Portland, Maine

Kirkus Reviews

2018-12-11

The latest thriller from Swanson (All the Beautiful Lies, 2018, etc.) is a twisty, fast-paced tale that depicts picket-fence suburbia's seamy, murderous underside.

Hen and her husband, Lloyd, have just left Boston for the tranquil burbs, and things are looking up for her. After a psychotic break sparked by the unsolved murder of a neighbor, Hen is on the mend, her bipolar disorder under control, her optimism resurgent, her career as an illustrator of dark YA books taking off. At a meet and greet she and her husband hit it off, or think they should, with their next-door neighbors Matthew and Mira, the only other childless couple nearby. But when they cross the driveway for a barbecue, the potential for neighborly coziness curdles. Hen notices a little fencing trophy on a shelf in Matthew's office and recognizes it—or wonders if she recognizes it—as one of the mementos the police reported was stolen from the murder scene in the city. When Hen recalls that the man killed was once a student at the prep school where Matthew teaches history, Hen grows suspicious of Matthew—and starts to stalk him. Is this a break in the case or the beginning of another fit of paranoia? And even if it's the former, who will believe Hen's suspicions given her earlier obsession with the case and the hospitalization it led to? Swanson is at his best in exploring the kinship—or what some see as the kinship—between artist and killer, one of the themes of Swanson's great model and forebear, Patricia Highsmith. Swanson isn't quite up to Highsmith's lofty mark, and he succumbs toward the end to a soap opera-like plot-twist-too-far...but for the most part, this novel delivers.

A dark, quick-moving, suspenseful story stuffed full of psychological quirk and involution.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940173656971
Publisher: HarperCollins Publishers
Publication date: 03/05/2019
Edition description: Unabridged
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