On their five year anniversary, Nick Dunne’s wife, Amy, goes
missing. The police are phoned and Nick cooperates with them as much as he can,
but his lack of emotion about his wife’s disappearance seems a bit fishy.
Coinciding with Nick’s account of the disappearance, Amy’s diary tells the
story of the couple’s meeting, engagement, and marriage. At the end, Amy does
not paint a pretty picture of their marriage. What really comes into play is the reaction from the media and how quickly they blame Nick and jump on top of the coverage. This book tells the story of a
couple who seemed so perfect for each other, but had lately fallen into dire straits
and a husband who cannot seem to tell the truth and is suspected of his wife’s
murder.

However, this book took a turn for me in sections 2 and
three. They are shorter and read faster. A lot of action and incident happen
within these parts instead of just interior dialogue and relationship
building/deconstructing. These sections made the book click together and create
a unique and interesting plot. The ending will leave you wondering what will happen
in the future and perhaps with a bit of frustration.
This might be a love/hate book, but I didn’t love or hate it
(except for the first section, which I did not like). Flynn writes her
characters well. You feel what they feel and get frustrated over their actions.
The intelligence of them rolls off the page and I enjoyed the level of language
they used.
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