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Summary
Summary
NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER * The disappearance of a beautiful, charismatic mother leaves her family to piece together her secrets in this propulsive novel for fans of Big Little Lies --from the bestselling author of All We Ever Wanted Was Everything and the upcoming Pretty Things.
" Watch Me Disappear is just as riveting as Gone Girl. "-- San Francisco Chronicle
Who you want people to be makes you blind to who they really are.
It's been a year since Billie Flanagan--a Berkeley mom with an enviable life--went on a solo hike in Desolation Wilderness and vanished from the trail. Her body was never found, just a shattered cellphone and a solitary hiking boot. Her husband and teenage daughter have been coping with Billie's death the best they can: Jonathan drinks as he works on a loving memoir about his marriage; Olive grows remote, from both her father and her friends at the all-girls school she attends.
But then Olive starts having strange visions of her mother, still alive. Jonathan worries about Olive's emotional stability, until he starts unearthing secrets from Billie's past that bring into question everything he thought he understood about his wife. Who was the woman he knew as Billie Flanagan?
Together, Olive and Jonathan embark on a quest for the truth--about Billie, but also about themselves, learning, in the process, about all the ways that love can distort what we choose to see. Janelle Brown's insights into the dynamics of intimate relationships will make you question the stories you tell yourself about the people you love, while her nervy storytelling will keep you guessing until the very last page.
Praise for Watch Me Disappear
" Watch Me Disappear is a surprising and compelling read. Like the best novels, it takes the reader somewhere she wouldn't otherwise allow herself to go. . . . It's strongest in the places that matter most: in the believability of its characters and the irresistibility of its plot." -- Chicago Tribune
"Janelle Brown's third family drama delivers an incisive and emotional view of how grief and recovery from loss can seep into each aspect of a person's life. . . . Brown imbues realism in each character, whose complicated emotions fuel the suspenseful story." -- Associated Press
"When a Berkeley mother vanishes and is declared dead, her daughter is convinced she's alive in Janelle Brown's thriller, calling to mind Big Little Lies and Gone Girl ." -- Variety
Author Notes
Janelle Brown is an American journalist and writer, born in San Francisco, California. She is a graduate of UC Berkeley. Her career includes being a staff writer for Wired, and writing for the websites HotWired and Wired News. She was editor and co-founder of Maxi, a women's pop culture webzine. Her work has appeared in The New York Times, Vogue, Elle, Wired, Self, The Los Angeles Times, and other publications. She is the author of All We Ever Wanted Was Everything, This is Where We Live, and Watch Me Disappear.
(Bowker Author Biography)
Reviews (5)
Publisher's Weekly Review
Almost a year after failing to return from a solo hiking trip, Billie Flanagan has been presumed dead. However, her teenage daughter Olive refuses to believe it. As the anniversary of her mother's disappearance approaches, Olive begins having visions that lead her to believe Billie is still alive and trying to communicate with her telepathically. Olive's father, Peter, who has let go of any hope for Billie's return and is writing a memoir about their lives together, believes Olive is having seizures and should be medicated. After Peter quits his job to work on the book, intense concentration on his and Billie's life leading up to the hiking trip uncovers clues that their marriage wasn't all he thought it was. If he chooses to accept his daughter's idea that his wife may still be alive, he risks shattering every happy memory he has of their past. But living a painful lie might be a worse outcome for everyone. Brown's (All We Ever Wanted Was Everything) novel is more than just a page-turning suspense story. It's a gripping family drama that focuses on the choices we make and the ties that bind us to the ones we love. Agent: Susan Golomb, Writers House. (July) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.
Booklist Review
*Starred Review* Billie wasn't always a Berkeley supermom. She had a tumultuous childhood, a rebellious adolescence, even a felonious period in her early twenties. When she met Jonathan, a straitlaced technology editor, she finally felt ready to settle down. After she and Jonathan got married and had their daughter, Olive, Billie felt the stirrings of independence again. It started gradually getting in the car and driving to Utah after a fight, then returning with an armful of groceries as if no time had passed but her solo hiking trips and weekends away had become more frequent. When Billie disappears while hiking, police only find a shattered cell phone and a hiking boot near the trail. With little else to go on, Jonathan and Olive reassemble what they truly know about Billie and decide if they're willing to learn the whole truth. Like a darker, meatier Where'd You Go, Bernadette (2012), Brown's latest explores the messy inner life of a mother just starting to feel invisible to her own family. This brilliantly layered novel is full of twists and turns, tender and biting and vibrant. Readers who can't get enough of the Girl -type suspense trend will be more than satisfied with this tautly paced domestic drama.--Turza, Stephanie Copyright 2017 Booklist
New York Review of Books Review
The central character in Brown's novel is a free-spirited Berkeley supermom named Billie, missing for a year and now presumed dead. But why is she appearing in an evocative and convincing series of visions seen by her teenage daughter, Olive? They begin with a beach superimposed on a hallway at Olive's school; through the waves, she sees two students putting up posters. As the third period bell rings, her mother appears where sand and sea meet. "I miss you. Why aren't you looking?" Billie says, her voice strong and disappointed despite her diaphanous appearance. "You aren't trying hard enough." She must be alive, Olive thinks giddily. At the outset, heartache is the overwhelming mood. Billie's husband and daughter hunger for the combination of devotion and challenge she once offered. Then incongruities begin to surface. Billie disappeared on a solitary camping trip, but the earlier ones she was supposed to have taken with a friend turn out not to have happened. What could she have been doing instead? Billie's husband, an overworked tech-magazine editor, realizes he knows surprisingly little about her. She ran away from tyrannical, religious parents when she was in high school. She participated in radical actions in the forests of the Pacific Northwest with a drug dealer boyfriend. After marrying and apparently settling down, she became a practiced flirt. When Olive moved from childhood to adolescence and began to separate from her mother, Billie redirected her energies, turning into an avid outdoor sports enthusiast. Brown is at pains to show the different meanings that can be found in Billie's bold behavior. How far should you take the search for independence? The border between self-preservation and self-interest becomes intriguingly murky. Unfortunately, Brown doesn't overcome the essentially inert nature of the relationship between Billie and her husband. But Olive's insights feel fresh and real. And, once disclosed, the reason for Billie's disappearance is particularly satisfying.
Kirkus Review
A missingpresumed deadwoman's husband and teenage daughter struggle with her absence and the question of whether she is truly gone in this third novel by Brown (This Is Where We Live, 2010, etc.).Nearly a year after her mother, Billie, disappeared while hiking a wilderness trail in Northern California, Olive, a high school junior, starts having vivid visions. In them, Billie appears in a variety of settings, speaking short, inconclusive sentences that Olive believes mean she wants to be found. But if her mother is alive, why did she disappear? That happens to be the same question Olive's father, Jonathan, has begun asking himself after learning that Billie lied about several weekend trips she'd taken in the months before she vanished. As he digs deeper, Jonathan uncovers too many secrets to ignore, shaking his understanding of his wife and marriage but otherwise pointing in no particular direction. While he worries that Billie was unfaithful, Olive worries that she's in danger. Both concerns feel justified; neither feels like the whole story. All the themes here are well-trod. There's the family coping with loss and its attendant questions. There's the Manic Pixie Dream Girl who's revealed to be darker and possibly more dangerous than believed. There's the supernatural quality of Olive's visions (is there a medical explanation, and does it matter?). There's the natural shifting that happens in a family when children turn into teenagers, and there's the ode on perfect Berkeley motherhood. It's because the author deftly incorporates all these themes into one building mystery, however, that the book is so page-turning. Readers are likely to be unsure of which outcome would be most satisfying until the very end. Moody but restrained, this is a familiar tale that sets out to upend itselfand succeeds. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Library Journal Review
Essayist and journalist Brown's third novel (This Is Where We Live; All We Ever Wanted Was Everything) explores a family shaken when wife and mother Billie disappears on a solo hiking trip and is presumed dead. -Jonathan mourns his restless wife, while adolescent daughter Olive starts seeing her mother in visions and is convinced that she is alive. The duo's journey of grief is delicately handled, alongside their suspenseful search for the truth about Billie. But as they uncover multiple secrets from her past, they find out that you never really know someone. With romantic subplots and surprise elements, including an unexpected finale, this evenly paced novel is multilayered enough to have wide appeal. A domestic suspense novel along the lines of A.S.A. Harrison's The Silent Wife or Shari Lapena's The Couple Next Door, this has less overt violence and a more emotional story at its heart. The mystery behind Billie's disappearance is subtle and intertwined with the idea of family and identity. VERDICT Readers interested in exploring the fissures in marriages and the arc of a character's journey through a dramatic story will enjoy this.-Melanie Kindrachuk, Stratford P.L., Ont. © Copyright 2017. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.