Convince Me: A Novel
Convince Me: A Novel book cover

Convince Me: A Novel

Kindle Edition

Price
$10.99
Publisher
Ballantine Books
Publication Date

Description

“When a seemingly perfect husband, son, and friend is tragically killed, his house-of-cards life comes crashing down, exposing the twisted secrets and lies he’s been hiding for years. Nina Sadowsky is a master storyteller. From the very first page, the story flies, giving life to the characters and plot until all has been revealed. Convince Me is one hell of a read!” —Wendy Walker, New York Times bestselling author of All Is Not Forgotten “One of the cleverest psychological suspense novels I’ve read in years . . . tense, gripping, and fast-paced. . . lies piled upon lies and an entire cast of unreliable narrators that will have you wondering if anyone is telling the truth. . . I raced through this wickedly deceptive thriller in one sitting—highly recommended!” —Karen Dionne, #1 internationally bestselling author of The Marsh King’s Daughter and The Wicked Sister “A propulsive thriller that starts with a bang and never lets up until its final shocking reveal . . . In Convince Me , Nina Sadowsky’s brisk, energetic prose spills across the page, tightening the noose around the central terrifying question: How far would you go to learn the truth about the people youxa0 love?” —Carla Buckley, author of The Liar’s Child “This thriller tells a story that couldn't be more timely for this ‘post-truth’ age. It concerns liars and the damage they cause, with the stakes of manipulation, gaslighting, and all-around deception drawn out on the ‘small stage’ of domestic suspense. It’s my favorite kind of book, because it all felt personal. I was constantly asking myself, What would you do in that situation? even while I was trying to solve the mystery. But when the solution finally arrived, I never saw it coming. This book felt like a Roman candle. You watch it take off, then it just keeps climbing with one twist after another until it finally goes boom .” —Lee McIntyre, author of Post-Truth “This thriller tells a story that couldn't be more timely for this "post-truth" age. It concerns liars and the damage they cause, but here the stakes of manipulation, gaslighting, and all-around deception are drawn out on the "small stage" of domestic suspense. It's my favorite kind of book, because it all felt personal. I was constantly asking myself "what would you do in that situation?" even while I was trying to solve the mystery at the heart of it. But when it finally arrived, I never saw it coming. This book felt like a Roman candle. You watch it take off, then it just keeps climbing with one twist after another, until it finally goes BOOM.” —Lee McIntyre, author of Post Truth Nina Sadowsky has written numerous original screenplays and adaptations for such companies as The Walt Disney Company, Working Title Films, and Lifetime Television. She was the executive producer of The Wedding Planner, has produced many other films, and was president of Meg Ryan’s Prufrock Pictures. Sadowsky is the Los Angeles program director for New York University's Global Programs initiative, serving the Tisch, Steinhardt, Stern, and Gallatin schools. This is her fourth novel, following Just Fall, The Burial Society, and The Empty Bed . --This text refers to the hardcover edition. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. Chapter One AnnieI nearly died the day we met.It was February, just over three years ago. I was in Mammoth for a ski trip with my best friend, Bella. On day one, Bella wiped out on her second run. The next morning, nursing a sore wrist and lump on her head, she said she wanted to take it easy.When I came back to our condo from the slopes midday to check on her, she informed me she was hitching a ride back to L.A. with another friend. I couldn’t really be angry. She felt like shit and wanted to go home. She volunteered to pay for her half of the rental and told me I should stay, ski, and mingle as she toted her suitcase out the door with her good hand.I stayed. I skied. I didn’t mingle; I was protecting my battered heart. A man about whom I’d been foolish enough to entertain “happily ever after” fantasies had proved to be a serial cheater. This bruising realization, just as we had neared our first anniversary, had led to Bella’s suggestion of a few days in Mammoth—xada girls’ trip, now a solo retreat.I tried to embrace it. I skied hard. Came back to the condo. Braved the cold to make it out to the hot tub on the deck. Cooked and consumed huge bowls of pasta mixed with decadent, chunky lumps of butter and generous sprinkles of Parmesan cheese. I passed out early, exhausted, and slept deeply.The day I was to drive back to Los Angeles, snow dumped on Mammoth. Big, fat lazy flakes.I’m a California girl. First in line to get my learner’s permit the day I turned fifteen and a half. So even though I’d been a (self-xadstyled) demon of the road for twelve years, driving on snow was not in my particular wheelhouse.Wary of the weather, I got an early start, loading my little Acura, wiping a crust of snow off the windshield, climbing into the car, and blasting the defrosters.I pulled out cautiously. I found out later that the temperature had dropped into single digits the night before; a thick sheet of ice lay beneath the freshly falling wet snow. As soon as I accelerated, my car slid and skidded, the wheels churning uselessly for purchase. Frantically, I tried to remember what to do in a skid. Turn into it? Away from it?Panicked, I stomped on the brake. The car fishtailed and spun. As the world twirled before my eyes, I heard a piercing noise and realized I was screaming. After what felt like an endless free fall, the front end of my car slammed broadside into a parked pickup truck with a horrific crash and the whine of metal greeting metal.The airbag exploded. My head snapped back and then forward. My vision blurred. I blinked and wiped my eyes. My hand came away bloody.But I was alive. I sat there dazed for a moment, or maybe it was an hour.A face appeared through the splintered windshield. A man’s face, kind and open, classically handsome, twisted in concern. He opened my car door and leaned in.“I’m Justin Childs,” he introduced himself. “And it looks like you might need a hand.”He’s dead now, this man I came to know and love and marry.I’m a widow.At the tender age of thirty-xadone.That fact, cold, hard, and inescapable, seems distant and absurd, like a tragedy from someone else’s life, not mine.This wasn’t supposed to happen to me.My life before Justin’s death wasn’t perfect. I had my fair amount of shit, like anyone else, but I was aware that I enjoyed a lot of relative privilege.I’m white. I was blessed with appealing looks. I was raised in a solidly middle-xadclass family. I’m well educated. My bio dad took off when I was a baby, and, sure, maybe that left a wound, but my mom remarried and my stepdad, Santi, adopted me when I was a little kid and I love him like a father. I have perspective is the point. I’ve enjoyed advantages my entire life, and I’m smart enough to recognize how lucky I am.How lucky I was.I’m conscious of the drone of the funeral service around me, of the thick lump clogging my throat, the constricting itch of my jet-xadblack pantyhose, the press of fellow mourners around me. Yet I’m also completely isolated, floating above my husband’s funeral as if suspended in a bubble, watching, observing.I’m seated in the front row, of course. The place of “honor.” On my right is Justin’s brittle bird of a mother, Carol. On my left is Bella, my oldest friend. She wraps a gentle arm around my shoulders, as if she senses me floating away and is trying to tether me to earth.To Bella’s left are Jahnvi and Sunil; Sunil worked with Justin and the four of us went out together many times. Jahnvi has been particularly kind during this nightmare, parking her kids at her mother’s and coming by to make sure I’ve eaten (usually I haven’t) and to see that I’ve “rested” (not for days).In fact, every single employee from Justin’s company, Convincer Media, is here, and they’re all genuinely wrecked. Justin was their beloved leader, and they were following him to startup glory. They idolized him, or at least the success he promised them.The pastor asks us to rise. As I do, I catch a glimpse of Will’s rigid profile at the far end of the row. I know Will must be suffering as much as I am; Justin was his best friend and his business partner, and the three of us were a little family.What are we now, with Justin gone?A primal longing for my mother floods me. Mommy. I’m a grown woman, but Justin’s death has rendered me a helpless child.She’s on her way back to L.A. with my stepfather, Santiago. They were in Hong Kong the day Justin’s body was found, the third stop on a luxurious four-xadcity tour that Justin had gifted them for their twenty-xadfifth anniversary. The trip was a dream come true for my mom, and I was as delighted as she was when Justin surprised them. The vacation was so specific to Mom, who had always dreamed of going to Asia. It was so extravagant, so thoughtful. So very Justin.One travel snafu after another has left them stranded in Dallas, with no chance of getting here before tomorrow. Another reason I have to hold it together. I need my mom to promise that it will all be okay.Even though I know that’s bullshit. Nothing will be okay. Not ever again.My husband lies stiff and dead in the mahogany coffin in front of me. The police say it was most likely an accident; that Justin was under the influence of Valium, of all things, when his car shot over a tight curve on Mulholland Drive and plummeted down a mountainside. The former I don’t believe; the latter I know is ridiculous. Justin had vices, but Valium wasn’t among them.None of it seems quite real. Could he have been taking pills without me knowing? His younger brother died from an overdose and Justin was rigidly anti-xaddrug, so if he was, he would have hidden it. Still, I can’t quite see it.Did he take the pills by mistake? If so, what did he think they were? Or did someone else drug him? Could someone have wanted to hurt Justin? But who? And why?Or did the police just get it wrong?Questions churn through my brain, but none of them have easy answers.For days now, people have been commenting on my stoicism. How well I’m handling everything. As we sit through this service, however, I can tell that those selfsame people are starting to wonder. I must seem cold, emotionless. I just haven’t been able to cry yet.I’m afraid if I start I’ll never stop. My heart is broken.This, what I thought was the defining love affair of my life, has ended in devastating grief, a word which now consumes me.grief [grēf]noun, deep mental anguish, as from bereavementsynonyms: heartache, angst, pain, misery, woeMy very first love affair was with words. Their heft and power. Their origins and shaded meanings. Their ability to tell a story, promote an agenda, evoke a sentiment, capture a moment, steal a heart. I love the way even the simplest, most everyday words can have so many interpretations and associations, can be shaped by context or perspective. Writing has always been my sustenance.I haven’t written a single word since Justin died.I pull my attention from this funeral home, from the rows of mourners and the pastor intoning a prayer, from Justin’s mother weeping to my right, from my hands twisting in my black-xadclad lap. I sink back into the memory of the first time I met him: joyously, brilliantly, exceptionally alive. --This text refers to the hardcover edition. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • A charismatic man’s death exposes the secrets he kept, revealing him to family and friends as an unrepentant pathological liar in this explosive thriller from film producer and author Nina Sadowsky.
  • Convince Me
  • will keep readers guessing until the very end.”—
  • New York Times
  • bestselling author Karin Slaughter
  • Justin Childs is handsome, likeable, smart. A devoted son to his mother, Carol; a loving husband to his wife, Annie; and a sure-footed, savvy business partner to his best friend from college, Will. To so many, the perfect man.He’s also a liar. And now he’s dead. When Justin’s body is retrieved from the wreckage of a car accident, his death leaves his loved ones with more questions than answers. In life, his charm and easygoing nature inspired trust, making him friends wherever he went. Now that he’s gone, the cracks begin to show: disturbing discrepancies in his company’s financials, unaccounted-for absences, a medical record that appears to be entirely fabricated.  As the secrets and betrayals pile up, Annie, Carol, and Will realize their beloved Justin was not the man they thought he was. And why was he found dead with Valium in his system when he notoriously detested drugs? Was the crash that killed him really an accident—or did Justin finally get caught in something he couldn’t lie his way out of?
  • Convince Me
  • is a chilling look at what makes a sociopath in an age of untruth—and a high-octane, surprising read to its very last page.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(94)
★★★★
25%
(78)
★★★
15%
(47)
★★
7%
(22)
23%
(71)

Most Helpful Reviews

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Don’t miss this one!

Convince Me is a compelling, tight read that pulled me in from the first sentence, then kept me turning the pages. Sadowsky’s use of language is masterful as she spins a tale offering just the right details, about a man whose friends and family are in grief and disbelief after his death.

Almost immediately there are hints that something isn’t right, although I had no idea what. How did the man really end up dead? Had he really been a devoted husband and brilliant businessman or was he someone else entirely? Each character had their own chapters, written from each one’s viewpoint. I was intrigued with deciphering their thoughts and motivations, and figuring out who was telling the truth or what the truth even was. Once, I tore myself away from the book to deal with real life. But I kept mentally sorting out the story, thinking “I wonder what really happened?” and “What’s with Carol?”

As a huge added bonus, there are also a lot of insights on life and relationships woven into the story. So Convince Me works on multiple levels. It manages to be entertaining, brainy, and visually rich simultaneously, like watching a movie only you get into the characters’ brains. You definitely don’t want to miss this one!
14 people found this helpful
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Totally transporting - totally satisfying

This book hooked me from the beginning -- I connected deeply with the characters -- couldn't stop reading it!
I am sorry it ended.
3 people found this helpful
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How long has Justin been plotting to destroy their lives and why would he want to do so?

Justin Childs is adored by all. He's charismatic, so very smart and creative, willing to share ideas, praise, wealth and his wide circle of those who can get things done. He knows everyone who matters and is able to use those connections in every way possible.  When he dies in an automobile accident, driving off the end of the road into space, while loaded on Valium, his wife and best friend can't understand why that would happen since Justin didn't take drugs like Valium. But they soon realize that Justin was all lies, that everything he touched was fake. Justin was a liar, a cheat, a fraud and he'd been so for at least the last decade.

The story is told from the viewpoint of three people, Justin's wife, Anne, Justin's best friend and business partner, Will, and Justin's mom, Carol. As much as Carol loved Justin unconditionally, she was always aware that he made exceptions to the truth, that he did things wrong, that he hurt people, but Carol could always make excuses for Justin's failings. Carol would do anything to protect Justin's reputation, whether he deserved to have his reputation protected or not.

Anne and Will's lives are falling apart after Justin's death. Their lives had been so entangled in everything Justin did and they never thought they had any reason to doubt Justin. Their home lives, their finances, their careers are being razed as Justin's death exposes all the cracks in Justin's very precisely curated life. What does Carol know, how much did she suspect, and can Anne trust her mother-in-law in her life? Is Justin pulling one last, brutal scheme from the grave? Anne and Will are implicated in things that Justin did. How long has Justin been plotting to destroy their lives and why would he want to do so?

Thank you to Random House Publishing Group - Ballantine and NetGalley for this ARC.
3 people found this helpful
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The unfolding of truth is a page-turning masterpiece. Loved this story. Five stars!

What a cast of characters! The wife, the mother, the best friend. Each of them loves Justin, the charmer, the perfect man – the perfect liar. After his death secrets and lies unravel. Who’s telling the truth and who’s telling a twisted version of the truth? Lies heaped on lies, twists and revelations, the mounting sense of disquiet as shocking truths are laid bare.

Chapter by chapter, each character tells the reader why they love Justin, what he means to them. Are they telling the truth about him, are they all fooled by him? The unfolding of truth is a page-turning masterpiece. Loved this story. Five stars!
2 people found this helpful
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Not worth your time and money.

I can't fathom why this book has so many stars. I found it boring and predictable. The use of three POV s might have worked if the author differentiated them, but unfortunately you have to go back to the headers to see who is talking. Not worth my time. I simply scrolled through to see the ending.
2 people found this helpful
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Book was compromised

I was reading this book and enjoying the read when it died halfway through it. It went from 50% read back to 16% read and I kept updating it and it would keep doing the same thing. I then deleted the book from my kindle and redelivered it through Amazon. Same thing happened again. So now in order to finish the book I will have to buy the paperback if available. Could it be my device? Possibly but I have over 400 books on my kindle and have never had it happen before. Buyer of this book beware...
1 people found this helpful
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Very enjoyable

When will our female protagonists learn that if the guy seems to be too good to be true, run?! This time, the protagonist is Annie, and the guy is her beloved husband, Justin, who has just died in a shocking car accident. Soon after Justin's funeral, Annie and Justin's best friend and partner, Will, start discovering that the Justin they knew and loved was a terrific liar, and the business he and Will had built was a flimsy house of cards. Convince Me is told from the perspectives of Annie, Will, and Justin's mother Carol in alternating chapters.

The story isn't a new one, but author, Nina Sadowsky, makes it special nonetheless. It was one of those books that I picked up one afternoon, and the next thing I knew I was 65% of the way through and couldn't put it down until I finished. And the ending was a real surprise! The author skillfully develops the characters of Annie, Will, Carol, and helps the reader understand how Justin became the man he was. He is a particularly nuanced character.

Convince Me was a fast read and kept me interested every step along the way, beginning with an especially pointed dedication to liars that had me hooked. I thought it was terrific and will recommend it to all my friends. Thanks to NetGalley and Random House for providing me a digital ARC in exchange for an honest review.
1 people found this helpful
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putting the con in convince

Justin Childs is dead. He was killed in a car accident, leaving behind his wife Annie, his mother Carol, and a hip tech company that he built with his best friend Will. Justin was loved. He made friends wherever he went. Everyone adored him. And now he’s gone.

Annie met him one day when her car slipped on the ice when she had been on a skiing weekend. Justin had showed up to help get her out of the car, get her medical treatment, and even ended up giving her a ride back home. That was the start of their relationship, and from his epic engagement to their beautiful wedding, it was like a fairy tale for Annie.

Will was in business school, scraping by on a shoestring budget when he met Justin. Justin knew where to get the best food for the least amount of cash. When Justin had to leave school to help his family—his brother had tried to commit suicide, and he had to go home to help his family. But years later, Justin showed up out of the blue, and Will was thrilled to have his friend back. Justin had a new idea for a business and asked Will to be his partner. They were just getting ready to launch their virtual reality software when Justin was killed. Will is going to have to figure out how to run the company on his own.

Carol was a single mother. Her husband had been killed when Justin was young, and that’s after she lost her parents and sister to a house fire back when she was in high school. Life has not been easy for Carol. but she worked hard selling real estate, and she worked hard to keep her family together. And now she is alone again.

But once the funeral has passed and life is getting back to, well, as normal as possible, Will starts to notice some discrepancies at the company. Their biggest backer wasn’t as Will’s funeral, and when Justin has a mutual friend get in touch with him, the man claimed not to know Justin or his company. Then Will finds out that Justin had spent company money without talking to Will about it. He’d bought a boat. He had a second apartment. He had credit cards that were in Justin’s name, with high balances. And then Will finds out that there is an issue with their software.

When Will talks to Annie about what he finds, she takes a look at Justin’s home office. She finds out that their home is mortgaged. There are credit cards in her name with high balances. And when she finds out that a friend of hers has gone missing, that sets off a series of actions that will change Annie forever. But when Will is arrested, will Annie ever be able to figure out what is truth and what is lies?

Convince Me is a slow-burn thriller from Nina Sadowsky, a former entertainment lawyer and screenwriter who clearly knows a thing or two about building tension. This book is filled with slow reveals of a sociopath, with clues being thrown before readers like breadcrumbs, until the point where the real truth gets served up on a silver tray.

I really enjoyed Convince Me. I was sucked into the story early on and didn’t want to stop listening until it was done. It’s interesting and compelling. Told through three narrators—Justin’s wife, mother, and business partner, the story unfolds from different directions, as the reader gets each character’s story, each new piece of information comes together to add more color to the full picture.

This was a fun book to listen to. There are three narrators, each telling the story of one character. With Caitlyn Davies as Annie, Carol Monda as Carol, and Sean Kenin as Will, the audio book embraces the three main characters, letting each one tell their own story, and letting Justin’s story be told in the spaces between. I enjoyed experiencing the story this way, and I think readers who enjoy a good thriller about a sociopath or who loves a slow-burn story will enjoy it also.

Egalleys for Convince Me were provided by Ballentine Books through NetGalley, with many thanks, but I also bought the audiobook through Chirp Books.
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Convince Me

If I could have given it 2.5stars, I would have but wasn't feeling generous enough to round up to 3stars. When I read in the summary that the author was a screenwriter for Lifetime, I kind of expected the story to resemble a Lifetime movie. While that might discourage most people, I wasn't. I actually enjoy a good Lifetime movie once in awhile. I can't say that about this book. Enough said.
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Definitely a page-turner

A fast read, the story holds your interest. I felt the end was a bit rushed and pat, but I would definitely recommend the book.