‘Had she uncovered their con?’ – This thriller is a keeper!
New York author D.M. Barr has worked in travel marketing, travel journalism, meeting planning, public relations, and real estate. After success as award-winning magazine writer and editor she became a mother and now writing is her business. Her books to date - EXPIRED LISTINGS, SLASHING MONA LISA, and now SAVING GRACE. She lives in the Hudson Valley.
For those following the very fine novels of D.M. Barr, the polished quality of her prose is expected. What may not be as obvious is her penchant for pinpointing ‘flaws’ in her characters, making use of a depth of insight into such variants as psychosocial behavior and dysfunctional marriages to create a fascinating interplay. In SAVING GRACE she nudges reality in incorporating her own career in writing into the schemata of the plot.
The drivers of the tale are suggested as the novel opens: ’One felony was all it took to convince Andrea Lin she was better suited to committing on paper than in person. As renowned mystery author Lynn Andrews [a clever choice of nom de plume! – typical of Barr’s talent], she understood conflict equaled good drama. Like her readers, she should have expected the hiccups, even relished them. What she hadn’t counted on was the accompanying agita, especially while sitting in her Bergen County kitchen, far from the action of the Bitcoin Teller Machine. Her one job had been to place a single phone call when the money hit and tell the hacker to lift the encryption on Grace’s computer. Trouble was, her dozen calls remained unanswered until a few minutes ago, throwing her meticulous plan off schedule.’ Subtly, and with keen planting of detail, the platform for the story that follows is set in motion.
Having anchored our attention, the plot is well distilled on the back cover: ‘Grace Pierrepoint Rendell, the only child of an ailing billionaire, has been treated for paranoia since childhood. When she secretly quits her meds, she begins to suspect that once her father passes, her husband will murder her for her inheritance. Realizing that no one will believe the ravings of a supposed psychotic, she devises a creative way to save herself—she will write herself out of danger, authoring a novel with the heroine in exactly the same circumstances, thus subtly exposing her husband's scheme to the world. She hires acclaimed author Lynn Andrews to help edit her literary insurance policy, but when Lynn is murdered, Grace is discovered standing over the bloody remains. The clock is ticking: can she write and publish her manuscript before she is strapped into a straitjacket, accused of homicide, or lowered six feet under? With a cast of secondary characters whose challenges mirror Grace's own, Saving Grace is, at its core, an allegory for the struggle of the marginalized to be heard and live life on their own terms.’
D.M. Barr continues to impress as an author of note. This is one superb thriller with a superior story, and an exploration of misunderstood ‘flaws’ of mind. Brava!