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Every Secret Thing
 
 

Every Secret Thing (Hardcover)

by Laura Lippman (Author)
3.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)

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Product details

  • Hardcover: 400 pages
  • Publisher: William Morrow & Company (Sep 2003)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 0060506679
  • ISBN-13: 978-0060506674
  • Product Dimensions: 20.6 x 14.2 x 3.3 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 3.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.co.uk Sales Rank: 2,818,555 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)

Product Description

Lee Child, DAILY EXPRESS, 7 Jul 06

"Exquisite as fine jewellery." --This text refers to the Paperback edition.


Product Description

It is early evening, summer time and hot. Two eleven year old girls, Alice and Ronnie, are on their way home from a swimming party when they happen to see a baby's stroller, with baby girl sleeping inside, left unattended on the top step of a house. Ronnie says to Alice: 'We have to take care of this baby.' But what exactly does she mean? Four days later the body of little Olivia Barnes is discovered in a hut in Baltimore's rambling Leakin Park by a young rookie detective, Nancy Porter. What can have happened in those four days to bring about this appalling crime? The girls are arrested and found guilty. Seven years later Ronnie and Alice, now eighteen, are released from their separate prisons, back into their old neighbourhood where the mother of baby Olivia still lives. Another child goes missing, and Nancy Porter and her partner get the case ... --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

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Customer Reviews

5 Reviews
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4 star:
 (3)
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Average Customer Review
3.2 out of 5 stars (5 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A Chilling Psychological Study & A Real Page-Turning Mystery, 11 Jul 2005
By Jana L. Perskie "ceruleana" (New York, NY USA) - See all my reviews
(TOP 50 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Every Secret Thing (Paperback)
On a hot July afternoon, two eleven year-old girls are sent home early from a birthday party. One of them, Ronnie, (Veronica Fuller), has been acting out inappropriately - her usual rebellious behavior - thus the banishment. Ronnie is prone to dark moods. Her companion, Alice, (Alice Manning), a shy, chubby girl who is innocent of any misbehavior, has to leave also, so her friend won't have to walk home alone. Actually, Alice doesn't really consider Ronnie a friend. Her mother, Helen, insists that Alice play with Ronnie, at least in the summertime, when Alice's schoolmates from St. William of York are at camp. Helen Manning, a single mom, doesn't have enough money to send Alice away for the summer months, or to continue with her private schooling after grade school. So Alice thinks of Ronnie as a "summertime-only friend," and a fellow "doesn't-have-a-pool-membership girl." Alice is a good girl, she believes, along with almost everyone else. She is very bright, although not anywhere near as creative or as artistic as her mother, which worries her. She so wants to please. Ronnie, on the other hand, comes from a very dysfunctional, working-class family, who scream a lot and steal from each other, and "the parents don't care what their kids watch on TV."

On the way home that July day, Ronnie decides she wants to take a shortcut through a really nice neighborhood, where the houses are fancier and the lawns more spacious. Ronnie spots a baby carriage on the porch of the biggest, prettiest house on the street. The two girls decide that the baby has been left carelessly in the sun and heat too long. The carriage is also too close to the steps and there could be an accident. So they decide to take the baby, to care for her better than her parents are doing.

Four days later, the baby's dead body is found by rookie cop, Nancy Porter, in a hut in Baltimore's Leakin Park. The child had been suffocated. Both girls are arrested. Although no clear account of the story emerges, they do admit to taking the baby. Ronnie and Alice are convicted and sentenced to spend the next seven years, until their eighteenth birthdays, in separate juvenile detention facilities, one a somewhat harsher institution than the other.

When the two are released, young adults now, they are advised to avoid each other. Each one has the possibility to make a new start in life, find a job, go to community college. The only bonds which remain between Alice and Ronnie are the secrets they hold close, and their bewildered reentry into a world where they have no past. As juveniles, their names were never released to the public.

Within a brief period after the girls gain their freedom, several small children begin to disappear from public places, only to be found again relatively quickly, and always on the premises where they were "lost." Then another toddler disappears, and this one is not found. The circumstances are chillingly similar to the abduction case seven years before. Now Alice's and Ronnie's parents, their lawyers, and the police, must discover and confront the shattering truths they did not push hard enough to find out years earlier. Otherwise, another family will lose their child.

This is a disturbing, unsettling novel with a stunning conclusion. The author's premise is that, perhaps, the most shocking crimes are committed by children. Or is the public more shocked that children are capable of commiting murder? Do eleven year-olds really understand what they are doing when they take a life? At what age do we prosecute children as adults for heinous crimes they commit? Ms. Lippman appears to believe that children are just as capable of calculation, premeditation and manipulation as anyone else. The reader is left to make his/her own decision.

All the characters in "Every Secret Thing" share some major commonalities. Adults and children alike, all long for acceptance by their peers. Don't we all? They all have secrets and all of them share serious emotional pain. I do think that apart from Ronnie, Alice and Helen Manning, (who is a complex woman and well portrayed), the characters are rather one-dimensional. Sharon Kerpelman was Alice's original lawyer, and is filled with guilt that she didn't work out a better deal for her client. She has stayed in touch with Alice during her detention period, and wants to act as a mentor now that the girl is free. Alice doesn't seem to care one way or the other. Baltimore homicide Detective Nancy Porter feels she has to prove she earned her rapid rise in the department. That her swift move from rookie to county detective was not because of her fluke find years before, nor because of family nepotism. Cynthia Barnes, the mother of the murdered child, is still grief-stricken, and her pain and guilt take the form of obsession for revenge. The character of reporter Mira Jenkins is totally flat. I don't really understand her place in the book, or the author's attempt to develop her. She obviously represents the presence of the press - but her part could have been played anonymously and the narrative honed. As is, many extraneous personages are introduced needlessly. I don't find any of the characters particularly likeable - but that's not a necessary component to enjoy this book. Also, I find it odd that there are basically no male characters, just the detectives who pretty much remain in the background.

"Every Secret thing" is much more than a mystery or a suspense thriller. It is a study of the two girls and the tragedy they cause. The novel also deals with issues of race, class, the burden of peer pressure, the larger issue of children who commit crimes and when they should be tried as adults, and SECRETS. As usual, the author's writing is taut and her story a page-turner.
JANA

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2 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars My review of "Every secret thing", 2 May 2005
By A Customer
This review is from: Every Secret Thing (Paperback)
After reading this book I was so glad that I borrowed it from my library,instead of increasing the royalties to the author.
The plot had potential, but was wasted, as halfway through the novel it degenerated into cliched "cop-speak" and totally irrelevant character padding which contributed nothing to the story.
Tedious,demographic heavy,the geographical detail was lost on this reader,as I know nothing about Baltimore City or County.
I raced to the end, eagerly, as I couldn't take much more of this inane,rambling drivel.

Characters appearing and disappearing for no apparent reason.
Endless "insights" into the personalities and histories of what seemed like an eternal cast of journalists,cops and sundry hangers-on.
There is nothing like a well-edited book and this was nothing like etc...
All I will say is that a major character committs suicide and just when I thought it was going somewhere, the ending was seemingly tagged-on, not making an awful lot of sense.
Reading between the lines is one thing, but practically crying from trying to see where the plot has gone is another.
All I can do, dear reader, is to say: there are other,well-written and deserving books,life is too short to bother with this one.
I apologise for any punctuation mistakes or grammatical/spelling errors,as there is only so much one brain can do after spending so much time on a truly DREADFUL book.

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4.0 out of 5 stars Which of them is telling the truth, if either?, 3 Oct 2009
By E. Shaw "Kokoschka's_cat" (Leeds, England) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Every Secret Thing (Paperback)
A good, efficient and well-written murder story by American writer Laura Lippman, this ticks all the right boxes and has an absorbing plot-line. It tackles the issue of children who kill - in this case two 11-year-old girls, sent home early from a party for bad behaviour, find an unattended baby and take her away from what they tell themselves are uncaring parents. When the baby is found dead four days later, the two girls tell conflicting stories about what happened. Which of them, if either, is telling the truth?

Seven years on and the girls, now teenagers, are released from the institutions which have been caring for them. Not long afterwards, a child disappears and the mother of the original murdered baby begins to meddle in the case.

Characterisation is exceptionally good for a crime novel. We learn about the mother of one of the girls, the public defender who acted for her during the trial, the female cop who found the dead baby, a female crime reporter and the baby's mother, among others.

There are elements of racism propounded by some of the characters (the baby was black and her abductors white), though it proves something of a red herring. Women are given a central role in what is normally a male-dominated genrč, though this is not something intrusive. Only after reading the book did it strike me that everyone important to the story was female. Every Secret Thing is a taut, grimly enjoyable crime novel.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews

3.0 out of 5 stars missing babies
this book started well, but about half way it lost its way, I then found it quite tedious but wanted to see how it would end so carried on reading, my first Lippman, not sure I... Read more
Published 21 months ago by Don's thoughts

4.0 out of 5 stars A real page turner
a baby goes missing and two 11 year old girls serve time and then are released after 7 years. British readers will spot a similarity with a notorious UK case, but Laura Lippmann... Read more
Published on 21 Nov 2003 by Uriah Robinson

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