SARA J. HENRY's first novel, Learning to Swim, won the Anthony, Agatha, and Mary Higgins Clark Awards, was a Target Emerging Author pick, and was named one of Best Books of 2011 by the Boston Globe. Her second novel, A Cold and Lonely Place, is an Anthony award nominee for Best Novel and was a Reader's Digest Select Books choice. She has written for Prevention, Adirondack Life, Bicycling, Triathlete, and other magazines, was an editor at Rodale Books and Women's Sports & Fitness magazine, and was a newspaper and magazine editor. A native of Oak Ridge, Tennessee, Sara lives in Vermont. Visit www.SaraJHenry.com.
“Featuring an independent and immensely likable lead, riffing on
the complicated nature of friendship, and boasting a solidly
plotted mystery, this may well appeal to fans of Gillian
Flynn.” —Booklist
“Sara J. Henry's stellar debut, Learning to Swim, collared
multiple major mystery awards. Now A Cold and Lonely
Place showcases Henry's powerful new voice. Set in the
Adirondack winter, it is both a deeply atmospheric, seductive read
and a captivating literary mystery. Put this one on your must-read
list!” —Julia Spencer-Fleming, author of Through the Evil
Days
“There is a mystery at the cold and lonely heart of this book, but
first and foremost, it’s a poignant and haunting story about Troy’s
search for the truth behind a young man’s life… This is a powerful,
emotional journey for Troy, but ultimately a hopeful one, as she
uncovers the stories behind one young man’s traumatic childhood,
stories that will finally redeem him.” —BookPage
“[The] sense of severing all previous ties and never truly getting
close to people permeates Sara J. Henry's insightful second
novel.... Henry explores the complicated nature of relationships
while delivering a suspenseful novel full of unpredictable
twists.” —South Florida Sun Sentinel
“A chilling mystery about families and friendships.” —Parkersburg
News and Sentinel
"[A] haunting follow-up to her Agatha-winning debut, Learning to
Swim ... Adding considerably to the compulsively readable
mystery that unfolds … is Henry's bone-deep sense of this terribly
beautiful place." —Publishers Weekly
"Henry brilliantly draws us into a terrifying but ultimately
affirmative novel in which, once again, love, friendship, and the
shining truth about who we really are redeems an otherwise hopeless
universe." —Howard Frank Mosher, author of The Great Northern
Express
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