Book: Before I Go To Sleep
Author: SJ Watson
Pages: 371
This is my 76th read for the year
What Amazon Says:
Memories define us. So what is you lost yours every time you went to sleep? Your name, your identity, your past, even the people you love - all forgotten overnight. And the one person you trust may be telling you only half the story. Welcome to Christine's life. Every morning, she awakens beside a stranger in an unfamiliar bed. She sees a middle-aged face in the bathroom mirror that she does not reognize. And every morning, the man patiently explains that he is Ben, her husabnd, that she is 47 years old, and that an accident long ago damaged her ability to remember. In place of memories Chistine has a handful of pictures, a whiteboard in the kitchen, and a journal, hidden in a closet. She knows about the journal becasue Dr. Ed Nash, a neurologist who claims to be treating her without Ben's knowledge, reminds her about it every day. Inside its pages, the damaged woman has begun meticulously recording her daily events - sessions with Dr. Nash, snippets of information that Ben shares, flashes of her former self that briefly, miraculously appear. But as the pages accumulate, inconsistencies begin to emerge, raising disturbing questions that Christine is determined to find answers to. And the more she pieces together the shards of her broken life, the closer she gets to the truth - and the more terrifying and deadly it is.
This was a decent book. It was a good one to listen to. It flowed okay. There were some plot holes, and I knew pretty much from the beginning who the bad guy was. I would say that SJ Watson is a bit wordy. A lot of "filler" among the dialogue. Over discriptions of the mundane just to increase pages. I found my self telling him to get on with it more than a few times. I liked the idea of the story - a woman with no memory waking up every single day and not knowing who or where she is - very frightening.
Stars: 3