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The Disappearance

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

When Joshua and Nathalie Sandler's only child, fourteen-year-old Daniel, disappears one day in a town in western Massachusetts, their world changes in an instant. Over the next year, Joshua neglects everything else to search ceaselessly for their son, while Nathalie, a gifted cellist, withdraws into herself, unable to play a note of music.

With lyrical prose and building suspense, Sigel portrays the anguish of parents who, despite the crushing burden of uncertainty and grief, must continue to live their lives. We meet various townspeople with motives and secrets of their own who might be involved in the disappearance or its aftermath. There is the mean-spirited president of the Board of Selectmen, neighbors who either come forward to help or who hide evidence, a deeply human police chief, half a dozen troubled teenagers, and a dark-haired, passionate young woman with secrets of her own, who is drawn to Joshua and his plight. As the mystery of Daniel's disappearance deepens, Joshua and Nathalie struggle to find new meaning in their existence—and to discover if their fragmented marriage can ever be made whole again.

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  • Reviews

    • AudioFile Magazine
      Is crisp pronunciation and good pacing all you need to enjoy a good story on audio? If so, Cullen delivers the goods as he recounts the murder of young Emma Lancaster and the efforts of Doug Lancaster, her media tycoon father, to see that Emma's accused killer hangs for it. But if you also like your audiobook performers to do real acting and to create distinct voices, you may find this recording wanting. Cullen gives unique voices only to the characters he absolutely has to, as when the author specifies a particular accent. Still, Cullen does enough good work with this involving legal thriller to keep the cassettes flying by, though it would be nice to be able to tell the boys from the girls during long stretches of dialogue. J.P.M. (c) AudioFile, Portland, Maine
    • Publisher's Weekly

      Starred review from December 8, 2008
      Sigel's powerful and elegantly crafted second novel (after The Kermanshah Transfer
      ) explores the impact of the disappearance of a boy shortly before his 14th birthday on his parents. Daniel Sandler is adored by Joshua and Nathalie, an upper middle-class couple who summer in a small rural Massachusetts community. One day, the Sandlers return to their summer home from a mundane errand to find Daniel gone. As the hours pass with no clues to Daniel's whereabouts, their despair and anxiety escalate geometrically, and hopes that their child will return unscathed evaporate. Despite the dogged efforts of local law enforcement, weeks and then months pass without progress in the investigation. The uncertainty takes its toll on Joshua and Nathalie, both as individuals and as a couple. The mystery's resolution is secondary to Sigel's subtle and probing look at the consequences of a tragedy.

Formats

  • OverDrive Listen audiobook

subjects

Languages

  • English

Levels

  • Text Difficulty:8-12

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