Ratings27
Average rating3.1
From the New York Times and international bestselling author of Sometimes I Lie comes a brand new, highly anticipated, dark and twisted thriller: I Know Who You Are. Meet Aimee Sinclair: the actress everyone thinks they know but can’t remember where from. Except one person. Someone knows Aimee very well. They know who she is and they know what she did. When Aimee comes home and discovers her husband is missing, she doesn’t seem to know what to do or how to act. The police think she’s hiding something and they’re right, she is—but perhaps not what they thought. Aimee has a secret she’s never shared, and yet, she suspects that someone knows. As she struggles to keep her career and sanity intact, her past comes back to haunt her in ways more dangerous than she could have ever imagined. In I Know Who You Are, Alice Feeney proves that she is a master of brilliantly complicated plots and killer twists that will keep you guessing until the final page.
Reviews with the most likes.
This book started off good I enjoyed the dual perspective and the mystery factor of how it would all come together at the end. The middle was very slow and very repetitive, and I started not liking it after Maggie dies, and the flashback chapter starts. The twist blew me away, how “Ben” was Aimee's long-lost brother. It's been awhile since a twist had took me by that much of a surprise. It was disgusting, and the fact that she STILL sleeps with him after finding out (and becomes pregnant!!!!!) I found no character likable, they all really annoyed me. The twist saved the book for me, even though I hated it, it was shocking and made the boring parts worth it.
This was such a disturbing book. Not my cup of tea. Now I need to remove what I read from my memory.
Contains spoilers
I had heard from somebody that the ending is “gross.”
From her first flashback recalling her brother, I looked at my partner and said how much you want to bet that it's incest? So I went through the whole book knowing that incest was a part of this. The only twist that I didn't see coming was that “Maggie” was the brother aka her “missing/dead” husband. So the incest didn't appear to me as shock value cause I already knew but in the end I have to agree, it's still gross. I wish at the end she didn't have to then add another sex scene to further imply the grossness.