La donna alla finestra

La donna alla finestra

A.J. Finn

3.94
889,848 valutazioni·65,547 recensioni

Anna Fox vive sola, reclusa nella sua casa di New York, incapace di uscire. Passa le giornate bevendo vino (forse troppo), guardando vecchi film, ricordando tempi più felici… e spiando i suoi vicini. Poi i Russell si trasferiscono nella casa di fronte: un padre, una madre e il loro figlio adolescent...

pagine
455
Format
Kindle Edition
Pubblicato
2018-01-02
Editore
William Morrow

Sull'autore

A.J. Finn
A.J. Finn

15 libri · 0 follower

A.J. Finn, pseudonym for Daniel Mallory, has written for numerous publications, including theLos Angeles Times, theWashington Post, and theTimes Literary Supplement(UK). A native of New York, Finn lived in England for ten years as a book editor before returning to New York City.Librarian Note: There is more than one au...

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Valutazione e Recensione

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Recensioni della comunità

65,547 recensioni
3.9
889,848 valutazioni
5
45%
4
30%
3
15%
2
7%
1
3%
Miranda Reads
Miranda Reads·6 years ago
"My head was once a filing cabinet. Now it’s a flurry of papers, floating on a draft." Agoraphobic Anna Fox resides in New York City. She's found ways around anything and everything that she needs - whether it be grocery delivery, hiring a handyman or cases of her favorite wine every few months. She will never need to leave her house and can get numb the pain as much as she wants. “My dear girl, you cannot keep bumping your head against reality and saying it is not there.” She spends her time o...
Justin
Justin·7 years ago
Women, girls... they are everywhere, man. They’re in cabins, they’re on trains, they’re in spider’s webs or hornet’s nests. Sometimes they’re gone. Sometimes someone let them go. Sometimes they’re in a group. In this case, there is a woman in a window. She’s not a woman in white or a lady in shadows or a girl who circumnavigated anything. She’s just a woman named Anna Fox in a window. And, like all of her friends from all those other books, she likes to drink a lot. And, just like her friends, m...
Yun
Yun·7 years ago
The Woman in the Window suffers from the usual domestic thriller malady—an intriguing premise and a strong start that never quite materializes into a satisfying narrative.Going in, the first pages grabbed me immediately. Usually it takes a bit for me to get going on a new book, what with those initial pages being slow and setup-filled, but no such problems exist here. The beginning was fast-paced and full of riveting tidbits. But then we arrive at the main event, and the book completely slows to...
Emma Giordano
Emma Giordano·7 years ago
5/5 Stars. I am SO BLOWN AWAY BY THIS NOVEL. The Woman In The Window is an absolutely amazing debut mystery-thriller. I cannot recommend it enough.CW: agoraphobia, anxiety, depression, substance abuse/alcoholism, murder, death, griefMy favorite part of this novel is the writing style. A.J. Finn has the perfect sort of prose that forces you to think, “How can someone ACTUALLY think like this? How does someone forms the words to illustrate such a perfect passage?” This book is descriptive in a way...
Barry Pierce
Barry Pierce·7 years ago
I'm surprised that I actually finished this novel because my patience was gone, girl.
Emily (Books with Emily Fox on Youtube)
Emily (Books with Emily Fox on Youtube)·7 years ago
I don't know if this is an unpopular opinion but I'm getting a bit tired of reading mysteries where the main female character is an alcoholic. I get it, it makes them unreliable (and relatable for some maybe?) but it's a cheap way of doing it. With that said, I'm usually not too difficult with mysteries. They just have to not do anything stupid (racism, sexism...), be entertaining and have twists I don't see coming.In this book, you're following a psychologist who went through something traumati...
Emily May
Emily May·8 years ago
Who knows what goes on in a family? Okay, I really don't want to misrepresent this book: The Woman in the Window is a pulpy, fast-paced popcorn thriller. It's not mindblowing or groundbreaking, but it is pageturning goodness. And it was exactly what I needed to get lost in right now.The premise is a little bit of The Girl on the Train and a little bit of The Woman in Cabin 10 (what is it with these girl/woman/wife titles?!), with an unreliable narrator, faulty memories, alcoholism, and the au...
Roman Clodia
Roman Clodia·8 years ago
** Possible mild spoilers **Yet another super-hyped 'psychological thriller' which seems to think readers are innocents new to the genre... it's starting to feel like each new author just selects from a pack of established set pieces and gives them a bit of a shake hoping for something original. Here we have the traumatised, agoraphobic woman on a self-destructive binge of booze and pills keeping watch over her new neighbours and spotting a murder which the police claim never happened. Alongside...
Elyse Walters
Elyse Walters·8 years ago
Update… Paul and I just watched the movie….. Great Cast….. but much darker - much more gruesome- - didn’t follow the book impeccably at all— and not nearly as good as as the book……My goodness…… they dramatized the violent graphics in the movie - but never fully developed the characters. Oh well… what did others think of the film? Curious. Older original ‘book’ review: NO SPOILERSThis is a solid 4 Stars for me. It’s been awhile since I’ve read a psychological suspense thriller —-a surprise gift i...
j e w e l s
j e w e l s·8 years ago
3 STARSYou don't know how happy I was to get my greedy little paws on both the audio and Kindle versions of THE WOMAN IN THE WINDOW. My expectations were through the roof! Have you seen all those 5 star reviews? As it turns out, the book doesn't live up to the hype. Yes, it is as addictive as popcorn, I couldn't put it down. But, there are so many disappointing drawbacks that I couldn't rate it a 4 star read.For audio-lovers, do not waste your precious Audible credit on this one. It is absolute ...