
View from Here
A paranoid widow fears her late husband isnāt gone at all in a gripping psychological thriller by the New York Times bestselling author of Anthony Awardānominated These Toxic Things.
After eleven years, Nicole Baxter and her husband Trumanās marriage is beginning to fracture. Suddenly, during a scuba diving accident near Catalina Island, Truman is gone. No body. No signs of foul play. Presumed dead.
Clinging to the hope that Truman might still be alive, Nicole is devastated, in denial, and struggling with insomnia, as well as guilt over the secrets she kept from the man she lovedāa pregnancy, a miscarriage, and an incautious fling with an attentive neighbor. Then come the strange occurrences putting Nicole further on edge. The scent of Trumanās cologne. The wet footprints in the house. The cryptic texts from his phone. And the message written on her bathroom mirror: Iāll luv u 4ever.
Nicole has never felt so alone, isolated, and paranoid. If sheās losing her mind, then why does it seem so real? If itās real, how is that possible? As Nicoleās grip on reality slips away, the answers are becoming a matter of life and death.
Revised edition: This edition of The View from Here includes editorial revisions.
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Description
A paranoid widow fears her late husband isnāt gone at all in a gripping psychological thriller by the New York Times bestselling author of Anthony Awardānominated These Toxic Things.
After eleven years, Nicole Baxter and her husband Trumanās marriage is beginning to fracture. Suddenly, during a scuba diving accident near Catalina Island, Truman is gone. No body. No signs of foul play. Presumed dead.
Clinging to the hope that Truman might still be alive, Nicole is devastated, in denial, and struggling with insomnia, as well as guilt over the secrets she kept from the man she lovedāa pregnancy, a miscarriage, and an incautious fling with an attentive neighbor. Then come the strange occurrences putting Nicole further on edge. The scent of Trumanās cologne. The wet footprints in the house. The cryptic texts from his phone. And the message written on her bathroom mirror: Iāll luv u 4ever.
Nicole has never felt so alone, isolated, and paranoid. If sheās losing her mind, then why does it seem so real? If itās real, how is that possible? As Nicoleās grip on reality slips away, the answers are becoming a matter of life and death.
Revised edition: This edition of The View from Here includes editorial revisions.

