A first hardcover for the popular Hooper provides all the requisite thrills, chills, and hot-blooded romance, but this...

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AMANDA

A first hardcover for the popular Hooper provides all the requisite thrills, chills, and hot-blooded romance, but this southern-style mystery, love story, should-be-a-TV-movie-of-the-week somehow lacks soul. When 29-year-old Amanda Daulton appears at Glory--her childhood home and the place where most of her dead father's relatives still live--she's hardly met with open arms. Except for Jesse, her grandfather (who's dying of cancer and in the process of preparing his will), the rest of the family--supported by Walker McLellan, the suspicious Daulton family attorney--have their assorted reasons for suspecting Amanda of fraud; mostly, if she is in fact who she says she is, they wonder why can't she explain the evening 20 years before when her mother Christine snatched her away from Glory under cover of darkness. As Amanda struggles to recall that all-important night, and as most of her family struggles to prove she's an impostor out to get an inheritance, trouble ensues in spades: Amanda's poisoned at a party given by Jesse in honor of her return, Jesse's guard dogs are killed, and potentially dangerous sparks fly between couples--most notably between Amanda and the still suspicious but undeniably smitten Walker. The anticlimactic climax comes when Amanda learns the truth surrounding the events of her childhood disappearance. Hooper stretches believability to the limits in the final pages; a longtime (practically part of the family) housekeeper turns into a crazed monster, and Amanda is plunged into a highly improbable plot twist involving her recently departed mother. After far too many histrionics, the young woman's destiny is finally fulfilled. A well-traveled path with nary an unpredictable turn.

Pub Date: Nov. 1, 1995

ISBN: N/A

Page Count: 352

Publisher: Bantam

Review Posted Online: N/A

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Oct. 15, 1995

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