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Faces of Fear

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
New York Times bestselling author John Saul is a master at writing novels that chill the bones, curdle the blood, and tap into our darkest fears. He creates characters so real that you’ll feel as if they’re friends or family, and throws them into situations so terrifying that you won’t be able to look away until you turn the final page. Now, in Faces of Fear, Saul proves that there’s a fine line between perfection and madness.
Fifteen-year-old Alison Shaw may not be beautiful, but she doesn’t really care: She’d much rather read a good book than primp in front of a mirror anyway. But Alison’s gorgeous mother, Risa, knows that beauty can be a key to success and wishes only the best for her daughter, especially when Risa marries a widowed plastic surgeon and moves Alison from Santa Monica to Bel Air. Beauty may be only skin deep, but to the denizens of Bel Air it means the world. Everywhere mother and daughter look, they are surrounded by beautiful people, many of whom have benefited from the skills of Alison’s new stepfather, the charismatic Peter Dunn. Peter is certain he can turn Alison into a vision of loveliness, and Risa–drawn in by his cool confidence–is delighted. Reluctantly, Alison agrees to undergo the first procedure, and her transformation begins.
But soon Alison discovers a picture of Peter’s first wife. To Alison’s horror, she notices a resemblance between the image in the photo and the work her stepfather is doing on her. Though Risa refuses to acknowledge the strange similarity, Alison becomes increasingly frightened. Digging further into her stepfather’s murky past, Alison uncovers dark secrets–and even darker motives–and realizes that her worst fears are fast becoming her reality.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      June 9, 2008
      Beverly Hills plastic surgeon Conrad Dunn has put his talents to work making his wife, Margot, the embodiment of physical perfection, but after her face is scarred in a boating accident, Margot takes her own life in this less than suspenseful thriller from bestseller Saul (The Devil’s Labyrinth
      ). Remarrying within a year, Dunn persuades his new teenage stepdaughter, Alison Shaw, who’s struggling to adjust to life in the Dunn mansion and to a private school with a ridiculously affluent student body, to undergo breast-enhancement surgery. Meanwhile, the police are searching frantically for the Frankenstein Killer, a serial slayer who removes his female victims’ glands as well as more obvious body parts. The motive for the killings and the eventual outcome will surprise few readers. The basic premise has a plot hole big enough to fit a truck, but Saul fans may not notice or care if they do.

    • Library Journal

      July 15, 2008
      Alison's whole world changes when her mother marries plastic surgeon Conrad Dunn. She moves into a megamansion in the Hollywood Hills, leaves her public school behind for a prestigious prep school, and makes new friends. Her new friends have all had cosmetic work done on them by Alison's stepfather and give her suggestions on what she should have done. Although the thought of it creeps her out at first, she agrees to accept breast augmentation as a 16th birthday present. Her mother, Risa, also begins to contemplate having a nip or tuck done as she struggles with comparisons to Conrad's late first wife, whose model-perfect looks were crafted by Dunn. At the same time, murders are being committed around L.A. by the so-called Frankenstein Killer, who takes victims' glands and a facial feature. When the features are put together, whose face will it be? Saul's compelling 35th novel preys on society's obsession with beauty and perfection and imposes it on an innocent young woman. Recommended for all public libraries.Amanda Scott, Cambridge Springs P.L., PA

      Copyright 2008 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Booklist

      May 1, 2008
      Alison Shaw, 16, is OK with herself as she is; that is, physically fit and not obsessive about her plain face and flat chest. But a cascade of coincidences leads her to self-doubt. First, supermodel Margot Dunn, sidelined by an accident that minced one side of her perfect puss, takes a header onto some California coastal rocks. Then Alisons parents, real estate agent Risa and TV-station production manager Michael, split over his affair with another man. Then Risa is wooed and won by her wealthy client Conrad Dunn, Margots cosmetic supersurgeon widower, which shifts Alison from normal upper-middle-class neighborhood and friends to Dunns super-upscale haunts and a school full of rich girls whove already gone under his scalpel. Surrounded by feminine perfection, Alison reluctantly reassesses herself. Dunn has already assessed her and found bone structure to match Margots. He made Margot. Can he remake her? Meanwhile, a series of horrific murders is under way, in which each victim is left lacking a different facial feature. Saul has done so many imperiled-child thrillers that he probably could write one in his sleep. In fact, darned if he hasnt with this flaccid, routine, predictable example.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2008, American Library Association.)

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