BOOKS

The Mirror's Edge

A double kidnapping, or is it a double murder?

Twin toddlers, Shane and Liam Boyle, disappear into a void one chilly afternoon.

Their parents have no answers. The police have no leads.

As the anniversary of the abduction approaches, journalist Jase Deering interviews the boys' former nanny, a young woman scarred and terrified by what she witnessed, and by what she knows.

Graham Morick, son of an infamous occult figure, is the key. Is he the innocent children's author he claims to be? Or is he the inheritor of his father's evil legacy?

Jase and his lover, Robyn Matchfrost, will risk everything uncovering a story that leads them to . . . THE MIRROR'S EDGE.

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Reviews of The Mirror's Edge:

"Compelling and chilling, The Mirror's Edge delivers everything a reader could want - strong characters, a driving narrative and edge of your seat suspense. Unconventional and challenging, yet engaging and very human, it is a wonderful novel from a talented writer." -- David Morrell, author of SCAVENGER, CREEPERS, and THE TOTEM

"As the first anniversary of the kidnapping of two-year-old twins Liam and Shane Boyle approaches in Sidor's bone-chilling third novel, Chicago freelance journalist Jase Deering decides to investigate with his partner and girlfriend, the blind Robyn Matchfrost. Jase has his own demons: his 12-year-old brother, Matthias, was abducted and murdered when they were children. With the help of police detectives, Jase traces the palindrome mirrorrorrim, which the twin's abductor carved into their nanny's living flesh, to cult leader Aubrey Hart Morick, who advocated human sacrifice. Though Morick is long dead, Jase discovers that his son, Graham, lives in the area and isn't as harmless as he first appears. As Jase spends the next 10 years delving deeper into the world of Morick's cult, he realizes that even if he finds the Boyles, it may be too late to save them or himself. Sidor (Bone Factory) is a master of the unsettling, and each twist is more grisly and unexpected than the last. Readers won't be able to resist staying up all night to finish this haunting tale, though they may wish they hadn't." -- Publishers Weekly STARRED review

"No doubt about it: Sidor (Bone Factory, 2005) writes brilliantly." -- Kirkus Reviews