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My Name Was Eden: A Novel
Barnes and Noble
My Name Was Eden: A Novel
Current price: $27.99
Barnes and Noble
My Name Was Eden: A Novel
Current price: $27.99
Size: Audiobook
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For fans of
The Push
and
The Undoing
, an edge-of-your-seat thriller that peels back the layers of a family that's not as perfect as it seems.
“
My Name Was Eden
is a compulsive, didn't-see-it-coming thriller.”—Abigail Dean, international bestselling author of
Girl A
One twin vanished. The other twin remained. Until now...
When her daughter Eden came home from the hospital, Lucy was profoundly relieved. Eden had survived a drowning incident and had no apparent brain damage, no serious injuries, not even a scratch on her. Lucy fervently welcomed having a second chance at being the good mother she should have been before her teenager’s accident.
Until Eden tells her that Eden
isn’t
her name. Until she starts calling herself Eli. The name Lucy had reserved for Eden’s unborn twin.
Don’t worry
, says the doctor.
Eden is completely fine
, says her husband.
Of course I’m fine
, Eden says, with that strange new smile of hers.
I didn’t die. I’m here
.
But Lucy knows something’s very wrong with Eden. She’s not her maddening, complicated teenage girl anymore—this straight-backed, even tempered, steady-eyed child in her house is someone else entirely. Eden, it seems, is the twin who disappeared…
The Push
and
The Undoing
, an edge-of-your-seat thriller that peels back the layers of a family that's not as perfect as it seems.
“
My Name Was Eden
is a compulsive, didn't-see-it-coming thriller.”—Abigail Dean, international bestselling author of
Girl A
One twin vanished. The other twin remained. Until now...
When her daughter Eden came home from the hospital, Lucy was profoundly relieved. Eden had survived a drowning incident and had no apparent brain damage, no serious injuries, not even a scratch on her. Lucy fervently welcomed having a second chance at being the good mother she should have been before her teenager’s accident.
Until Eden tells her that Eden
isn’t
her name. Until she starts calling herself Eli. The name Lucy had reserved for Eden’s unborn twin.
Don’t worry
, says the doctor.
Eden is completely fine
, says her husband.
Of course I’m fine
, Eden says, with that strange new smile of hers.
I didn’t die. I’m here
.
But Lucy knows something’s very wrong with Eden. She’s not her maddening, complicated teenage girl anymore—this straight-backed, even tempered, steady-eyed child in her house is someone else entirely. Eden, it seems, is the twin who disappeared…