We'll Meet Again

by Mary Higgins Clark

Paperback, 2000

Status

Available

Call number

F Cla

Call number

F Cla

Barcode

3171

Publication

Pocket Books (2000), Edition: 1st, 319 pages

Description

At the heart of Mary Higgins Clark's stunning new novel of suspense is a brutal murder: that of Gary Lasch, a respected and successful young Greenwich, Connecticut, doctor and hospital and HMO head. He was found dead at his desk at home, his skull crushed by a blow with a Remington bronze sculpture, a prized piece from his art collection. The news strikes Greenwich society like a thunderbolt -- as does the news that Molly Carpenter Lasch, the beautiful young wife of the slain doctor, has been arrested for her husband's murder. According to the trial testimony of her housekeeper, Molly had left home in a rage against her husband to go up to their house on Cape Cod. The morning after Molly's return, the housekeeper found Gary dead in his study and Molly upstairs in bed covered with blood. Nobody believes Molly's claim to have no memory of the events of the night of the crime -- not her parents, not her friends, not even her own lawyer -- and evidence against her is overwhelming. To escape an inevitable conviction she accepts a plea bargain, and subsequently her lawyer wins her early parole. A few years later, on Molly's release from prison, she reasserts her innocence in front of TV cameras and reporters gathered at the prison gate. Among them is an old acquaintance and schoolmate, Fran Simmons, currently working as an investigative reporter for the True Crime television series. Determined to prove her innocence. Molly convinces Fran to research and present a program on Gary's death. Despite her skepticism, Fran agrees to go ahead. In doing so, she has a second agenda -- to learn the truth about her own father's suicide some fourteen years earlier, on the very night she graduated from Greenwich's Cranden Academy, which both she and Molly attended. Struggling to keep up a lifestyle he couldn't afford, apparently Fran's father killed himself because he was about to be exposed as an embezzler, although no trace was ever found of how he spent the missing money. Fran, intent on assuaging Molly's doubts about her husband's death and her own gnawing questions about her father's suicide, soon finds herself enmeshed in a tangled web of intrigue and menace -- more deaths and more unanswered questions about Gary Lasch's murder. As her investigation proceeds into the private life of the dead physician, her father's alleged embezzlement, and the affairs of Remington Health Management, there are those who know they must make a choice: face ruin or eliminate Fran Simmons. We'll Meet Again is Mary Higgins Clark, "America's Queen of Suspense," at her chilling best.… (more)

Original publication date

1999

User reviews

LibraryThing member miyurose
I like Mary Higgins Clark stories cuz they're quick and easy to read. Nothing you have to think about too hard. This one was pretty good "” I actually didn't have it figured out before I was supposed to.
LibraryThing member kelley.close
Good read. I actually took a one-year break from reading this book (not sure why, really) once I picked it back up again, I couldn't put it down. Although a typical murder mystery, it was still a thriller and definitely enjoyable.
LibraryThing member jayne_charles
This was a great read. It moved at a frenetic pace, kept me guessing until right at the end (I guessed whodunnit about three pages before the identity was revealed so don't know whether I can really claim that one...) and set up some really dramatic situations.
LibraryThing member mrvince
This was my first MHC book and I must say I thought it was a most enjoyable read. I am wondering which one to start next. OK it was an obvious plot but well written and built to a thrilling end. Does Fran Simmons appear again in any other book ? I hope so
LibraryThing member TinyDancer11
I usually LOVE MHC, and this one was a little disappointing. I was bored and kept waiting for it to pick up...Still an enjoyable read, just not nearly as enjoyable as many of her others!
LibraryThing member bookwitch24
Very interesting story.
LibraryThing member stillwaters12
I loved this book. I had forgotten how much I love Mary Higgins Clark. She doesn't have a set formula, her characters are always fully fleshed out and the reader wants to keep reading.

Molly Carpenter Lasch was charged with the murder of her husband. A small band of friends, an investigative
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reporter and Molly's lawyer search for the truth as other suspicious deaths go on.
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LibraryThing member Carol420
Molly Carpenter Lasch is accused of murdering her husband quite brutally with a Remington bronze sculpture and is incarcerated on those charges. Her memory of that night was nonexistant until she was out on parole and bit by bit events of that evening started fitting into place. It was surprisingly
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easy to keep track of the characters in the book, and the ending was not at all anticipated. I enjoyed this novel and would recommend it to anyone who enjoys suspense.
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Rating

(190 ratings; 3.4)

Pages

319
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