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A Sight for Sore Eyes

Audiobook
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 4 weeks
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 4 weeks
Having published 45 books, Ruth Rendell is an internationally popular mystery writer. She has won four Gold Dagger and three Edgar awards. She has been presented with the Commander of the British Empire honor, and named Grand Master by the Mystery Writers of America. In A Sight For Sore Eyes, Ruth Rendell's exceptional literary talent shines from each word. Teddy Brex is a handsome young man. Raised by parents who never loved him, he has grown to put his trust in objects. Things rarely disappoint him the way people do. Francine Hill is a lovely sight. And, like Teddy, she carries deep psychological scars. What brings these two young people together, however, isn't beauty. It is death. As Ruth Rendell probes the dark forces childhood has created in Teddy's and Francine's lives, an emotionally gripping story unfolds. Narrator Jenny Sterlin voices all the subtle layers of suspense that are the hallmark of Rendell's incomparable work.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      Starred review from March 1, 1999
      A pair of English teens, Teddy and Francine (who have grown up in dysfunctional families where common parenting faults are taken to extremes), meet and think that in each other they might find the beauty and freedom their own lives are lacking. Their troubled affair takes a while to get going, but once it does, Rendell's sharp characterizations and idiosyncratic descriptions are riveting. Though several deaths occur in the book, the only real mystery is that of the murder of Francine's mother, which Francine overheard (near the novel's beginning) when she was seven. Instead, Rendell (Road Rage, etc.) focuses more on how a few sedately bizarre ticks can build exponentially into insanity. Francine's stepmother, for example, progresses from simple worry about her stepdaughter's well-being to obsessive anxiety that borders on dementia. Rendell follows the story's principal objects as closely as she does its characters: the diamond and sapphire engagement ring that Teddy's indifferent mother finds in a public bathroom; the video case in which Francine's mother hid her love letters, the painting of two young lovers that shows Teddy the perfect beauty he would kill for. Rendell leaves nothing and no one unaccounted for, from the looks given by the neighbors over the fence to the idle thoughts that pass through characters' minds when they scan a room. A tour-de-force of psychological suspense, the novel culminates in a dramatic climax that's as unforgettable as what has preceded it. Mystery Guild main selection; Literary Guild featured alternate; simultaneous audio and large print editions; author tour.

    • AudioFile Magazine
      Ruth Rendell is queen of the psychological suspense thriller, and this story is a fine example of her work. Three lives come together: a gently if narrowly brought up young girl, an aging beauty who seeks workmen for casual affairs, and a handsome sociopath who murders for convenience, not pleasure. Veteran reader Donada Peters conveys the sense of fate and looming disaster one feels as these lives converge. Her gently bred voice makes the unthinkable real. Her characters are well defined but not exaggerated. Her depiction of the cloying, clinging and really quite mad stepmother is truly inspired. Listen to this story to understand how evil and justice work themselves out. D.L.G. (c) AudioFile 2000, Portland, Maine
    • AudioFile Magazine
      Rendell again proves herself a master at the psychological thriller, wringing excruciating tension from assiduously crafted characters. Here she eventually leads us to the intersection of two adults who suffered gruesome childhoods--Teddy, who grew up in a home free of the most elemental nurturance, and Francine, who witnessed the murder of her own mother. One becomes a sociopath, and the other the gentlest of souls. The suspense throughout is the dread that somehow their paths will cross. Sterlin's fine performance adds to the creeping horror. Even apart from the words she speaks, her very tone of voice conveys the frightening detachment that makes Teddy so dangerous and the essential goodness that makes Francine so dear. M.O. (c) AudioFile, Portland, Maine
    • AudioFile Magazine
      Here is Rendell's multilayered psychological suspense. Teddy, an unloved child, grows into an amoral young man who covets Francine, an overprotected shop girl who witnessed her mother's murder. Throw in Harriet, predatory housewife, and Julia, sicko psychiatrist, and the chances for a happy outcome diminish. The characters' control over others is important here, and Pigott-Smith expresses this with his ability to manage speed and dynamics. In one spot laughter echoes, and he makes you hear it. He also tells a lot about a character by mere insinuation. The story line is clear, but several subplots make careful listening to the abridgment a must. J.B.G. (c) AudioFile, Portland, Maine

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