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Paperback Past Perfect Book

ISBN: 1416572082

ISBN13: 9781416572084

Past Perfect

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Format: Paperback

Condition: Very Good

$4.99
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Book Overview

From bestselling author Susan Isaacs comes her "feisty, funny, and smart" (New York Times) novel about a successful TV writer who once worked for the CIA.

Katie seems to have the perfect life--a great husband, a precocious and winning ten-year-old son; and a glamorous job as writer for the long-running TV series, Spy Guys, based on her own surprisingly successful novel. But for Katie, writing about the spy business isn't...

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Past Perfect

Very good book indeed! Great story line and characters. Recommend this book for anyone who enjoys reading.

Fun book

I really liked this book. Before I bought - I read not so great reviews. Since I am a dyed in the wool Susan Isaacs fan - I had to go for it. I was not disappointed.

a great read

i always buy a susan isaacs book as soon as it comes out. it never lets you down. and i get it unabridged on CD because i'm always driving. her narators are always good, but better if she will read it herself, and she's always humorously clever, with a twisty plot you can enjoy trying to figure out. we need more books susan!!!!!

A Remarkable Journey

This story takes us on an adventure with a courageous woman who must find out why she was fired from the CIA years ago.

Entertaining, well written, humorous, and adventurous

Katie Schottland, who has an exceptional imagination, writes for "Spy Guys," an espionage television show. All she wants is to live happily ever after. Written with great detail, anticipation and exaggeration, PAST PERFECT features great humor. "How odd, I decided as I did an anti-garlic tongue brush with my Sonicare and almost choked as it slipped and hit my uvula, that someone like me, the anxiety queen, a woman given to imagining her own death from a freak accident on even the jolliest occasion (like catching fire while leaning over to blow out the candles on a birthday cake), would marry a man who appeared to be without a nervous system." When a former CIA colleague phones Katie about something mysterious, and then disappears, Katie becomes increasingly concerned. After checking with her mother, a noted analyst and several CIA contacts, Katie plans several face-to-face meetings to find Lisa Golding and determine what was so important. Additionally, Lisa mentioned that she had information about Katie's sudden termination from employment at the CIA 15 years prior. Visiting a former CIA contact in Cincinnati, Katie is impressed with the stately home of the East German émigré. "Because there was a huge Persian rug on the floor and a lot of Louis the Something chairs and a couch, a giant mirror in a gilt frame, and an oil painting of either a fat old lady in a white gown or a medieval pope, I assumed it was the living room." Eventually, Katie realizes a connection among the three East Germans who were set up with secret identities in the United States near the time of the fall of the Berlin Wall. She takes a couple of days off work to visit a man who may have information on Lisa's whereabouts, Katie's dismissal and their possible connection. As Katie reaches out in several directions to locate Lisa, she hits some dead ends. Even though she finds a thread of truth leading from associate to associate, she cannot learn the entire truth and is deceived at every turn. There was one flaw in Lisa that causes consternation in Katie and those assisting her: Lisa had been known as the consummate liar. "She claimed she was an Army brat. Another time she said she was the daughter of a troubleshooter for an American company in Europe, had gone to a Swiss boarding school." Was Lisa involved with another CIA operative? Was there a connection between them and the East German refugees? When Katie is informed of the reasons her employment was possibly terminated at the CIA, she ruminates as she sits in her vehicle. "I started worrying that the car would overheat if I sat there with the air conditioning on, but if I turned off the engine and opened the windows, I could get asphyxiated, plus get disgusting semicircles of sweat on my sleeveless chartreuse tank dress, which was surprisingly flattering, especially with big hoop earrings, although who would care when they pulled my dead body out of the car?" Entertaining, well written, very humorous and adventur
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