Article Contributed on: 5/23/2007 4:45:41 PM
The Arrangement by Suzanne Forster
Publisher: Mira (April 2007)
The Arrangement creates a heart chilling tale of suspense by adding echoes of some of the best suspense classics into a new context that will delight readers. The plot, characterization and detours are carefully prepared but this book is so much more than a well-written book!
Plot
Andrew Villard's wide had disappeared at sea three days ago when he spots something shiny while searching for her. He pulls a near lifeless body out of the ocean. Realizing that the shiny bracelet on her wrist belongs to his wife Alison Fairmont Villard, he saves her life and hires the best plastic surgeons to reconstruct her reef-battered face from photographs.
Alison wakes up in the hospital with a case of amnesia. She does not recognize her face nor the man who calls himself her husband. Circumstances force her to trust him and accept the scandalous arrangement he offers --- even though her intuition balks at the idea. She has her own secrets to hide. When an FBI agent Tony Bogart appears, he is determined to prove Andrew's guilt in Alison's accident. With Tony's personal vendetta as motivation, no hidden evidence is safe. Can the arrangement protect her or has she created an even more deadly threat by accepting it?
More details
Foster's portrayal of a severely dysfunctional families is heart-chilling. Every character, whether primary or secondary, has a role to play in a carefully prepared and unfolding nexus of suspense. Beyond the literary and stylistic perfection of this novel,
The Arrangement strikes the heart of suspense fans with familiar echoes in a new chord.
The harder to define aspect of tone in
The Arrangement is the quality that makes this novel a reader's choice. Take my favorite two Alfred Hitchcock movies, my favorite Daphne DuMaurier novel and add just a tiny twist of my favorite Nathaniel Hawthorne short story...mix it around and add more, transform it and you have Suzanne Forster's
The Arrangement ---and yet Foster's novel is so much better than any of those mentioned above! I just love it when an author takes a familiar idea and transforms it into something entirely new and better.
Suspense and
The Arrangement
Although suspense is my favorite genre, I actually quit reading most suspense for a long time because so much of today's suspense substitutes gratuitous violence and sex for real suspense. If a book is not good in the first place, no amount of gratuitous details will make it better. In Suzanne Forster's
The Arrangement, no detail is gratuitous. Now, there are definitely murders here, a kinky scene not appropriate for minors (which absolutely must be there for the perfect & psychologically satisfying resolution) and definitely some disturbed people, but this novel is real suspense. Each detail is carefully prepared, each character's secrets add to the spine-tingling suspense, no detour is superfluous but rather adds to the vision of the disturbed world. The carefully prepared ending twists and turns to the perfect resolution. Magnificent!
Reading Tips
If you like old Hitchcock such as
Rebecca or
Marnie, Daphne DuMaurier, or Nathaniel Hawthorne's story "The Birthmark," read this book! You'll be in for one great ride! If you have not seen or read these prior to reading Suzanne Forster's
The Arrangement, I would highly recommend them afterwards. Seen together, the genius of Forster's writing becomes even more apparent. Her transformation of familiar themes into a new story entirely new is as satisfying as the suspense!
Don't forget to read the dedication before AND after completing this novel.