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No Hiding in Boise

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
Angie is awakened by a midnight call from an officer with the Boise Police Department and thinks there must be a misunderstanding. The officer tells her that her husband was involved in a shooting at a local bar, but how can that be when her husband is sleeping right next to her? But when she turns to wake him, he isn't there. Tessa is the twenty-three-year-old bartender who escapes to a backroom storage closet during the shooting. When it comes to light that five people were killed, she is burdened with the question of why she survived. Joyce wakes up to a knock at her front door, a knock she assumes is her wayward son, Jed, who must have lost his keys. It's not Jed though. Two police officers tell her that Jed is dead, shot at a bar. Then they deliver even worse news: "We have reason to believe your son was the shooter." So begins the story of three women tied together by tragic fate?a wife trying to understand why her now-comatose husband was frequenting a bar in the middle of the night, the young woman whom her husband was apparently pursuing, and a mother who is forced to confront the reality of who her son was and who she is.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      March 29, 2021
      Hooper’s provocative third novel (after All the Acorns on the Forest Floor) explores the aftermath of a shooting in Boise, Idaho. Jed Ketcher shows up at Ray’s Bar late one night and kills five people and injures two before turning the gun on himself. The next day, Angie wakes up to an early morning phone call to learn that her husband, Cale, is in a coma after being shot in the head; and Joyce, who fell asleep wondering why her son Jed hasn’t come home, is awakened by detectives who inform her that Jed is dead and the suspected shooter at Ray’s. In the aftermath, Tessa, who was tending bar the night of the shooting, suffers from PTSD and reaches out to Joyce, and the two bond over coffee dates. Then, Angie, who has no idea why her husband was at a bar in the middle of the night, finds a disturbing note on Cale’s phone and begins to suspect he had an obsession with Tessa. Meanwhile, Joyce is devastated by the loss of her only child and contacts victims to apologize for Jed’s actions. Nuanced portraits of those impacted by mass shootings, particularly surviving family members as they process loss and guilt, make this a standout. Hooper’s unflinching, insightful account of the emotional fallout from tragedy is notable for its focus on hope in a time of immense sorrow. (June)Correction: The author's last name was misspelled in an earlier version of this review.

    • AudioFile Magazine
      Kim Hooper's ripped-from-the-headlines story is brought to life by a stellar team of narrators. Hillary Huber displays a wide range of emotions as a mother whose son has committed a horrific violent act. She searches for a way to deal with her grief, suffers blame by the community, and works to support her son's victims. Devon Sorvari, as Angie, expresses anger, confusion, and love as she struggles to understand why her now comatose husband, Cale, was in a bar instead of home in bed with her. Stephanie Willing portrays Tessa, the 20-something bartender whose voice reflects survivor's guilt after her life was saved by Cale. The rest of the cast gives additional victims and the shooter himself powerful voices that make them all seem real. N.E.M. Winner of AudioFile Earphones Award © AudioFile 2021, Portland, Maine

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  • English

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