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Never Look Back
Never Look Back | A. L. Gaylin
6 posts | 8 read | 3 to read
She was the most brutal killer of our time. And she may have been my mother... When website columnist Robin Diamond is contacted by true crime podcast producer Quentin Garrison, she assumes it's a business matter. It's not. Quentin's podcast, Closure, focuses on a series of murders in the 1970s, committed by teen couple April Cooper and Gabriel LeRoy. It seems that Quentin has reason to believe Robin's own mother may be intimately connected with the killings. Robin thinks Quentin's claim is absurd. But is it? The more she researches the Cooper/LeRoy murders herself, the more disturbed she becomes by what she finds. Living just a few blocks from her, Robin's beloved parents are the one absolute she's always been able to rely upon, especially now amid rising doubts about her husband and frequent threats from internet trolls. Robin knows her mother better than anyone. But then her parents are brutally attacked, and Robin realises she doesn't know the truth at all...
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TheLudicReader
Never Look Back | Alison Gaylin
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Pickpick

Although the whole is not quite as great as the sum of its parts, this was a total page-turner about family secrets inspired by Charles Starkweather and Carol Ann Fugate. (I can highly recommend the movie Badlands, if you have never seen it.)

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CoffeeK8
Never Look Back | Alison Gaylin
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A lovely #audiowalk before storms in the afternoon.

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CoffeeK8
Never Look Back | Alison Gaylin
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Another lovely day for an #audiowalk

TheBookHippie So pretty. 4y
britt_brooke 🤩 4y
39 likes2 comments
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OutsmartYourShelf
Never Look Back | A. L. Gaylin
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Pickpick

Started off very slow, but picked up around 30% of the way through. Twists and turns, & several plot threads that eventually dovetail together nicely. Good read. 4🌟

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Worder
Never Look Back | Alison Gaylin

I was impressed by how believable this book was in its' twists. Even by the standards of “twist“ fiction it was well handled, with an ending that while up to a point cliched was led to with sufficient originality that I was wondering who was who up until that point, and the overall path that led to it was very effective; I found it to be quite entertaining, and the identify of the big bad truly was well kept a secret.

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