
Her entry begins:
I'm in the midst of reading two books right now.About Not Who You Think, from the publisher:
I picked up the first one, Dear Future Me by Deborah O'Connor, while shopping for books to read on vacation this summer. The premise intrigued me... twenty years ago, an English teacher gave his students the assignment to write a letter to themselves twenty years in the future, and then he actually sends those letters out when the kids have grown up. The twist is that a student died mysteriously around the time the kids wrote the letters, and everyone only knows a piece of what happened to him. When one of the kids in the future receives her letter, she is so upset by her memories that she ends up taking her own life. Her best friend from the class, Miranda, becomes determined to solve the mystery of both deaths by interviewing former classmates. I'm really...[read on]
The copycat of a killer made famous by a true crime author kidnaps a classmate of the author’s daughter in this twisty thriller, perfect for fans of Paula Hawkins.Follow Arbor Sloane on Instagram.
Amelia Child has devoted her life to researching Gerald Shapiro, the Catfish Killer, a man who pretended to be other people online to gain women’s trust beforemeeting and killing them. Her book on the Catfish Killer, Into the Glass, earned wild success and a legion of true crime fans. Years later, Amelia is pulled back into the case when a girl from her daughter’s high school disappears, and all signs point to a copycat killer mimicking the Catfish Killer’s every move.
As Amelia meets with the detective who helped her study Gerald Shapiro years ago and they become suspicious of Shapiro’s son, Amelia’s daughter Gabby receives a letter from the kidnapper threatening that she might be next. Desperate to find the culprit before her classmate is killed or she becomes the latest victim, Gabby conducts her own search for the missing girl.
With Amelia’s own family at risk and the entire true crime world obsessing and investigating online, the stakes have never been higher. Everyone wants to find the killer—but when his modus operandi is to pretend to be someone else, he’s not going to be easy to catch.
The Page 69 Test: Not Who You Think.
Q&A with Arbor Sloane.
Writers Read: Arbor Sloane.
--Marshal Zeringue