Other people kill their husbands. Not her. “A darkly clever thriller about women’s thwarted ambitions, celebrity, the Time’s Up movement and revenge.”—People (Book of the Week) In Invisible Woman, a dangerous secret held for too long between estranged best friends rises to the surface, and a long marriage comes apart with devastating consequences. Joni Ackerman’s decision to raise children, 25 years ago, came with a steep cost. She was then a pioneering filmmaker, one of the few women to break into the all-male Hollywood club of feature film directors. But she and her husband Paul had always wanted a family, and his ascending career at a premier television network provided a safety net. Now they’ve recently transplanted to Brooklyn, so that Paul can launch a major East Coast production studio, when a scandal rocks the film industry and forces Joni to revisit a secret from long ago involving her friend Val. Joni is adamant that the time has come to tell the story, but Val and Paul are reluctant, for different reasons. As the marriage frays and the friends spar about whether to speak up, Joni’s struggles with isolation in a new city, and old resentments about the sacrifices she made on her family’s behalf start to boil over. She takes solace, of sorts, in the novels of Patricia Highsmith—particularly the masterpiece Strangers on a Train, with its duplicitous characters and their murderous impulses—until the lines between reality and fantasy become blurred. Invisible Woman is at once a literary thriller about the lies we tell each other (and ourselves), and a powerful psychological examination of the complexities of friendship, marriage, and motherhood.
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Praise for Invisible Woman:
"A darkly clever thriller about women's thwarted ambitions, celebrity, the Time's Up movement and revenge."-People
"#TimesUp meets Patricia Highsmith in a psychological thriller about friendship, marriage, and the broken promises of youth . . . In the decades since the attack, the onetime trailblazing artist has settled into a life of privileged domesticity as the wife of a successful television executive and a mother. When the book opens, she is becoming acutely aware of the trade-offs she has made. Lief excels at depicting these choices, as well as the context that made them difficult, if not impossible, to avoid."-Clea Simon, Boston Globe
"In this #MeToo thriller, Joni is determined to convince Val to tell the world her secret. In her quest, she unlocks an alarming truth about her husband. This is a suspenseful novel with lots of surprises and twists."-The Girlfriend, from AARP
"Part domestic thriller, part psychological mystery, this is a tight, well-paced novel, and it hangs on the complex and flawed character of Joni herself. Rediscovering Patricia Highsmith's novels, Joni begins to lean into the darkness of her own soul . . . Caught in the nefarious web of the patriarchy at every turn, she finds in Highsmith a way to fight back and reclaim some of her own agency. . . Absolutely a novel of its time-and a novel of women's stories across time."-Kirkus (starred review)
"What follows is a journey through secrets and lies, and Joni will stop at nothing to unravel them all. Lief tells Joni's story with lyrical energy while slowly ratcheting up the suspense, blending shocking twists with literary nuances to create a compelling, introspective narrative."-Booklist
"Timely . . . the psychological twists make it worth reading and hard to put down. For fans of Chandler Baker's Whisper Network or Louise O'Neill's Asking for It."-Library Journal
"It kept me turning the pages, it kept me up reading at night . . . The character Joni is so complex . . . The characters feel very authentic."-Erin Fielding, "On the Front Porch"
"Invisible Woman twists and turns, its escalating dangers alternating with fresh reveals, as momentum builds to a breaking point. . . Characters develop quickly from disagreeable but benign to chilling and dangerous; some readers will find this atmospheric novel engaging and disturbing enough to lose sleep. A literary psychological thriller, cultural study, and heartbreaking story of friendship and loss, Joni's unforgettable story involves layers of lies and the dangers of self-sublimation. Lief chills, entertains, and challenges."-Shelf Awareness
"[A] psychologically savvy look at the many victims and the long life of sexual assault, as well as a satisfying tale of coping through taking action. Joni is a lovably flawed but determined character and her decisions and determination will keep readers rooting for her and racing through this fast and absorbing drama."-First Clue Reviews
"Katia Lief's Invisible Woman is a stunning achievement: it's not only a taut thriller with a jaw-dropping twist, but also a literary exploration of the complexities of marriage and friendship, and a timely tribute to women who were silenced for all too long. The novel will stay with you long after you finish the last page."-Alex Finlay, bestselling author of Every Last Fear
"Attention, suspense readers: get ready to gasp. Attention, book clubs: get ready to argue. Invisible Woman is a wily, provocative literary thriller-classic but timely, retro yet right-this-minute-with brains in its head and ice in its veins. High-tension, high-class, and highly recommended." -A.J. Finn, #1 New York Times bestseller of The Woman in the Window
"From the first page to the last, Katia Lief's Invisible Woman will seize you and never let go. Smart and spellbinding . . . and most certainly your next favorite thriller."-Jennifer Hillier, award-winning and bestselling author of Things We Do in the Dark
Praise for Katia Lief writing as Karen Ellis:
"A beautifully rendered portrait of familial grief, loss, and decades-old demons wrapped inside a terrific race-against-time thriller starring a believably flawed heroine." Sarah Weinman
"One of the most compelling psychological thrillers I've read in a long time . . . I simply could not put it down." Alison Gaylin, USA Today bestselling author of What Remains of Me
"A terrific novel, wonderfully written, richly populated, and utterly gripping from start to finish." Chris Pavone, New York Times bestselling author of The Travelers
"Karen Ellis entwines complex storylines with breakneck precision. A must-read for fans of taut, unpredictable psychological suspense." Wendy Corsi Staub, bestselling author of Blue Moon
"A darkly clever thriller about women's thwarted ambitions, celebrity, the Time's Up movement and revenge."-People
"#TimesUp meets Patricia Highsmith in a psychological thriller about friendship, marriage, and the broken promises of youth . . . In the decades since the attack, the onetime trailblazing artist has settled into a life of privileged domesticity as the wife of a successful television executive and a mother. When the book opens, she is becoming acutely aware of the trade-offs she has made. Lief excels at depicting these choices, as well as the context that made them difficult, if not impossible, to avoid."-Clea Simon, Boston Globe
"In this #MeToo thriller, Joni is determined to convince Val to tell the world her secret. In her quest, she unlocks an alarming truth about her husband. This is a suspenseful novel with lots of surprises and twists."-The Girlfriend, from AARP
"Part domestic thriller, part psychological mystery, this is a tight, well-paced novel, and it hangs on the complex and flawed character of Joni herself. Rediscovering Patricia Highsmith's novels, Joni begins to lean into the darkness of her own soul . . . Caught in the nefarious web of the patriarchy at every turn, she finds in Highsmith a way to fight back and reclaim some of her own agency. . . Absolutely a novel of its time-and a novel of women's stories across time."-Kirkus (starred review)
"What follows is a journey through secrets and lies, and Joni will stop at nothing to unravel them all. Lief tells Joni's story with lyrical energy while slowly ratcheting up the suspense, blending shocking twists with literary nuances to create a compelling, introspective narrative."-Booklist
"Timely . . . the psychological twists make it worth reading and hard to put down. For fans of Chandler Baker's Whisper Network or Louise O'Neill's Asking for It."-Library Journal
"It kept me turning the pages, it kept me up reading at night . . . The character Joni is so complex . . . The characters feel very authentic."-Erin Fielding, "On the Front Porch"
"Invisible Woman twists and turns, its escalating dangers alternating with fresh reveals, as momentum builds to a breaking point. . . Characters develop quickly from disagreeable but benign to chilling and dangerous; some readers will find this atmospheric novel engaging and disturbing enough to lose sleep. A literary psychological thriller, cultural study, and heartbreaking story of friendship and loss, Joni's unforgettable story involves layers of lies and the dangers of self-sublimation. Lief chills, entertains, and challenges."-Shelf Awareness
"[A] psychologically savvy look at the many victims and the long life of sexual assault, as well as a satisfying tale of coping through taking action. Joni is a lovably flawed but determined character and her decisions and determination will keep readers rooting for her and racing through this fast and absorbing drama."-First Clue Reviews
"Katia Lief's Invisible Woman is a stunning achievement: it's not only a taut thriller with a jaw-dropping twist, but also a literary exploration of the complexities of marriage and friendship, and a timely tribute to women who were silenced for all too long. The novel will stay with you long after you finish the last page."-Alex Finlay, bestselling author of Every Last Fear
"Attention, suspense readers: get ready to gasp. Attention, book clubs: get ready to argue. Invisible Woman is a wily, provocative literary thriller-classic but timely, retro yet right-this-minute-with brains in its head and ice in its veins. High-tension, high-class, and highly recommended." -A.J. Finn, #1 New York Times bestseller of The Woman in the Window
"From the first page to the last, Katia Lief's Invisible Woman will seize you and never let go. Smart and spellbinding . . . and most certainly your next favorite thriller."-Jennifer Hillier, award-winning and bestselling author of Things We Do in the Dark
Praise for Katia Lief writing as Karen Ellis:
"A beautifully rendered portrait of familial grief, loss, and decades-old demons wrapped inside a terrific race-against-time thriller starring a believably flawed heroine." Sarah Weinman
"One of the most compelling psychological thrillers I've read in a long time . . . I simply could not put it down." Alison Gaylin, USA Today bestselling author of What Remains of Me
"A terrific novel, wonderfully written, richly populated, and utterly gripping from start to finish." Chris Pavone, New York Times bestselling author of The Travelers
"Karen Ellis entwines complex storylines with breakneck precision. A must-read for fans of taut, unpredictable psychological suspense." Wendy Corsi Staub, bestselling author of Blue Moon