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The woman in the window : a novel  Cover Image Book Book

The woman in the window : a novel

Finn, A. J. (author.).

Summary: "It isn't paranoia if it's really happening ... Anna Fox lives alone--a recluse in her New York City home, drinking too much wine, watching old movies ... and spying on her neighbors. Then the Russells move next door: a father, a mother, their teenaged son. The perfect family. But when Anna sees something she shouldn't, her world begins to crumble--and its shocking secrets are laid bare. What is real? What is imagined? Who is in danger? Who is in control?"--

Record details

  • ISBN: 9780062678416 (hardcover)
  • Physical Description: print
    regular print
    427 pages ; 24 cm
  • Publisher: New York : William Morrow, an imprint of HarperCollinsPublishers, 2018.
  • Badges:
    • Top Holds Over Last 5 Years: 4 / 5.0
Subject: Recluses -- New York (State) -- New York -- Fiction
Families -- New York (State) -- New York -- Fiction
Agoraphobia -- Fiction
Genre: Psychological fiction.
Suspense fiction.

Available copies

  • 24 of 24 copies available at BC Interlibrary Connect. (Show)
  • 2 of 2 copies available at Sechelt/Gibsons. (Show)
  • 1 of 1 copy available at Gibsons Public Library. (Show)

Holds

  • 0 current holds with 24 total copies.
Show Only Available Copies
Location Call Number / Copy Notes Barcode Shelving Location Holdable? Status Due Date
Gibsons Public Library FIC FINN (Text) 30886001048327 Adult Fiction Hardcover Volume hold Available -
100 Mile House Branch FIN (Text) 33923005926617 Suspense Volume hold Available -
Alexis Creek Branch FIN (Text) 33923006091452 Adult Fiction Volume hold Available -
Big Lake Branch FIN (Text) 33923006019917 Suspense Volume hold Available -
Bowen Island Public Library F FIN (Text) 30947000537767 Fiction Volume hold Available -
Burns Lake Public Library AF FIN (Text) 35198000650003 Adult Fiction Volume hold Available -
Castlegar Public Library FIC FIN (Text) 35146002058493 Fiction Volume hold Available -
Chetwynd Public Library FIC FIN (Text) 35222000987601 Adult Fiction Volume hold Available -
Dawson Creek Municipal Public Library F FIN (Text) DCL161705 Adult Fiction Volume hold Available -
Fernie Heritage Library FIC FIN (Text) 35136000535337 Adult Fiction Volume hold Available -

  • Booklist Reviews : Booklist Reviews 2017 November #1
    *Starred Review* "Funeral March of a Marionette" is heard somewhere off in the distance as the shadow of Alfred Hitchcock, for whose TV program that 1872 Gounod piece served as the theme,moves across each page of this neo-noir masterpiece. Grab a bottle of Merlot, and settle in to accompany Anna Fox on her nightmare journey, a journey confined, almost in its entirety, within the walls of her New York City home. Anna suffers from agoraphobia and has carefully arranged her housebound existence around her many medications, including bottles of wine and classic thriller films, as she keeps in contact with her husband and daughter, nurtures fellow agoraphobes in an online support group, plays virtual chess, Skypes French lessons, and maintains close surveillance of her neighbors. Safe from the world outside. Then her cocoon begins to unravel when she witnesses a murder in the house across the way. Sound familiar? However, author Finn has carefully paced Anna's internal narrative and intricately woven interactions (real or imagined?) and added a diabolical dimension that makes this story even more intense than Hitchcock's Rear Window. And when the catalyst for Anna's condition is ultimately revealed, it is far more traumatic than a broken leg. An astounding debut from a truly talented writer, perfect for fans in search of more like Gone Girl and The Girl on the Train.HIGH-DEMAND BACKSTORY: Scheduled for publication in 35 languages and with a film already in development at Fox 2000 with Scott Rudin producing, this could be the first novel that climbs highest on this year's bestseller lists. Copyright 2017 Booklist Reviews.
  • BookPage Reviews : BookPage Reviews 2018 January
    An act of cloak-and-dagger publishing

    In suspense fiction, as in life, things aren't always as they appear. We view events through similar, although by no means identical, lenses. And therein lies the fun, both between the covers of The Woman in the Window, the new year's most audacious psychological suspense debut, and in the intriguing, real-life turn of the table by its pseudonymous author, A.J. Finn.

    As The Woman in the Window opens, we meet Dr. Anna Fox, a New York child psychologist turned thoroughly modern mess following her unexplained separation from her husband and daughter 11 months prior. Now an agoraphobic, voyeuristic shut-in, Anna whiles away the days within her Manhattan brownstone, wineglass in hand, monitoring her park-side neighbors through her digital camera, binge-watching classic movies (Rear Window, anyone?) and counseling other agoraphobics online.

    Then Anna observes and reports to police a shocking act of violence at the residence of a new neighbor. Did she imagine it? Can police (and the reader) trust her interpretation of the event? Suffice to say, the plot twists that follow blow the roof off her carefully insulated world.

    While fans of Gone Girl, The Girl on the Train and Alfred Hitchcock's films will feel right at home in Anna's wine-addled reality, the unusual backstory behind its provenance bears a touch of suspense fiction as well.

    A.J. Finn is actually Dan Mallory, a 38-year-old senior vice president and editor for William Morrow who spent years at Oxford pursuing his doctorate in literature, largely inspired by his love of the classic suspense fiction of Agatha Christie, Ruth Ware and his dissertation subject, Patricia Highsmith. Like many in publishing, Mallory admits he'd fantasized about tasting life on the other side of the editing desk. Unfortunately, timing was an issue.

    "It was a flicker in my mind for some time—this idea that I could write something—but [it wasn't something] that I pursued with any intent whatsoever," Mallory says by phone from his Manhattan office. "I never wrote so much as a poem as an adult, in part because, for the longest time—probably since 1988 when The Silence of the Lambs was published—the market was dominated by serial killer thrillers by the likes of Thomas Harris, James Patterson and Patricia Cornwell. I enjoyed the serial killer thriller as much as the next reader; I just didn't have one in me."

    That changed dramatically in 2012 with the publication of Gillian Flynn's Gone Girl.

    "She ushered in a new world that we now term ‘psychological suspense.' This was the sort of book that I had read and studied, that I might try to write," Mallory says. "It was only after the market seemed propitious and readers demonstrated an appetite for this sort of literature that I thought to myself, right—if I come up with a story, perhaps now is the time to strike. And low and behold, this character strolled into my head, dragging her story behind her."

    As Anna made herself at home, Mallory found her overactive, incessantly introspective mind to be a "comfortable fit." Like Anna, the author has struggled with severe depression, and explains that Anna's experience with agoraphobia closely matches his own. "Since I wrote the book, I've been in a much better place psychologically than I was for over a decade," Mallory says. "At the same time, I developed a pretty keen sense of empathy. That's the silver lining of depression, or at least it was in my case. So I felt for this character."

    "‘Is this really plausible? Wouldn't people shut their blinds?' NO! No one in New York shuts their blinds!"

    As easy as it was to channel Anna, Mallory also effortlessly accessed the inner voyeur of his readers.

    "I wrote the book in my flat in Chelsea, and my desk is right beside the window in my living room. Across the street is a pair of beautiful brownstones, and the windows are never shuttered, the curtains never drawn," he says. "A few readers, on finishing or even getting a couple chapters into the book, have said to me, ‘Is this really plausible? Wouldn't people shut their blinds?' NO! No one in New York shuts their blinds!"

    But why the pseudonym? This is where Mallory performed his own third-act twist.

    "Because I work in publishing, I wanted to hedge my bets when it came time to submit the book," he explains. "It would have been embarrassing for me had the book not been acquired, which was what I expected. But we submitted the book, and within 36 hours, we were fielding offers. At which point my agent and I said, ‘Right, it's time for me to come clean and introduce myself as myself, so they know what they're getting into.' Happily, no one backed out."

    One thing's for sure: The format of The Woman in the Window, with exactly 100 chapters, each no more than five or six pages, is a thriller editor's dream.

    "I don't know that I consciously tapped into much of my [editorial] experience, but then I wouldn't need to, would I? Because it's built into me, it's baked into me by this point!" Mallory chuckles. "Man, I love a short chapter. This is a technique that I admired in James Patterson's work."

    Mallory's success with his debut thriller, which sold in September for a rumored seven figures and will be marketed in 38 territories, may have set a record for a newcomer. Having successfully jumped the table from editor to author, Mallory bid farewell to William Morrow in December to craft his next psychological thriller, set in San Francisco.

    Until then, we'll start closing our blinds.

     

    This article was originally published in the January 2018 issue of BookPage. Download the entire issue for the Kindle or Nook.

    Copyright 2018 BookPage Reviews.
  • Kirkus Reviews : Kirkus Reviews 2017 November #1
    A lonely woman in New York spends her days guzzling merlot, popping pills, and spying on the neighbors—until something she sees sucks her into a vortex of terror."The Miller home across the street—abandon hope, all ye who enter here—is one of five townhouses that I can survey from the south-facing windows of my own." A new family is moving in on her Harlem street, and Dr. Anna Fox already knows their names, employment histories, how much they paid for their house, and anything else you can find out using a search engine. Following a mysterious accident, Anna is suffering from agoraphobia so severe that she hasn't left her house in months. She speaks to her husband and daughter on the phone—they've moved out because "the doctors say too much contact isn't healthy"—and conducts her relationships with her neighbors wholly through the zoom lens of her Nikon D5500. As she explains to fellow sufferers in her online support group, food and medication (n ot to mention cases of wine) can be delivered to your door; your housecleaner can take out the trash. Anna's psychiatrist and physical therapist make house calls; a tenant in her basement pinch-hits as a handyman. To fight boredom, she's got online chess and a huge collection of DVDs; she has most of Hitchcock memorized. Both the game of chess and noir movie plots—Rear Window, in particular—will become spookily apt metaphors for the events that unfold when the teenage son of her new neighbors knocks on her door to deliver a gift from his mother. Not long after, his mother herself shows up…and then Anna witnesses something almost too shocking to be real happening in their living room. Boredom won't be a problem any longer. Crackling with tension, and the sound of pages turning, as twist after twist sweeps away each hypothesis you come up with about what happened in Anna's past and what fresh hell is unfolding now. Copyright Kirkus 2017 Kirkus/BPI Communications. All rights reserved.
  • Library Journal Reviews : LJ Reviews 2017 August #1

    A much-bruited Frankfort title, buzzing even before BookExpo opened, sold to 35 countries, and in development as a Fox film, Finn's white-knuckler defines the term hot debut. Its heroine, the reclusive Anna Fox, hides away in her New York apartment tippling wine, watching old movies, and looking out the window, most recently at the husband, wife, and teenage son who just moved in across the way. Then she sees—or thinks she sees—something shocking, and what follows has wracked nerves enough to merit Gone Girl/Girl on the Train comparisons. With a 200,000-copy first printing.

    Copyright 2017 Library Journal.
  • Publishers Weekly Reviews : PW Reviews 2017 November #1

    Child psychologist Anna Fox, the unreliable narrator of Finn's gripping first novel, lives out one of the classic films that she loves so well—Hitchcock's Rear Window. In this modern update, the agoraphobic Anna hasn't left her Manhattan townhouse in more than 11 months. When she's not observing the neighbors and photographing them with her digital camera, she's watching movies, playing chess, and counseling other agoraphobics via an online forum. Then her obsession with the new family across the park begins to take over. When Anna witnesses a stabbing in their house, no one believes what she saw is real—and it's entirely possible that Anna shouldn't believe it herself. The secrets of Anna's past and the uncertain present are revealed slowly in genuinely surprising twists. And, while the language is at times too clever for its own good, readers will eagerly turn the pages to see how it all turns out. This highly anticipated debut has already received endorsements from such notables as Gillian Flynn and Louise Penny. Agent: Jennifer Joel, ICM Partners. (Jan.)

    Copyright 2017 Publishers Weekly.

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