The #1 New York Times bestselling author of Big Summer masterfully combines Stephen King with Donna Tartt, plus a twist of Shirley Jackson, in this timely tale of a man, his new partner, and his old dog.
When he was a boy, it was just him and his mother, and when he was an adult, it was just him, alone. Michael Corcoran thought it would always be that way.
Then heâd met Tina, who didnât know that heâd never had friends, or what kinds of âexperimentsâ he liked to do in his lab in the garage as a boy. Instead of being alone, Michael had a wife, and children and, eventually, a dog.
Michael had promised himself he wasnât going to be one of those people who pushed their dogs in carriages and called them âfur babies.â âJust wait,â Tina saidâand soon enough, Lady was enjoying premium kibble and wearing a tiny Eagles jersey, plus special booties for the snow. He and Tina even developed a voice for Lady, a routine: a low, gruff, cigarettes-and whiskey tone that went with the tragic backstory they gave her.
Then Tina found a lump in her breast. And then she was gone. And then small, determined Suzanne Nelson dropped by Michaelâs newly empty apartment with some homemade lasagna and never left. The transition wouldâve gone smoothly if not for Ladyâand the lisping, babyish falsetto Suzanne used when she âtalkedâ as the dog.
Michael asked her to stop. And Suzanne did her best. But some things people canât change, no matter how they try, like how they sound, and who they loveâand who they are, in the wee small hours, when itâs dark and no oneâs watching.
Riina
18/01/2023
Once I had begun I could not stop listening. A very good story.