Sidney Sheldon's Chasing Tomorrow - Sidney Sheldon & Tilly Bagshawe

Sidney Sheldon's Chasing Tomorrow

By Sidney Sheldon & Tilly Bagshawe

  • Release Date: 2014-10-07
  • Genre: Fiction & Literature
Score: 4
4
From 67 Ratings

Description

#1 New York Times bestselling author Sidney Sheldon’s most popular and enduring heroine—Tracy Whitney of If Tomorrow Comes—returns in a sensational sequel full of passion, suspense, and breathtaking twists.

Tracy Whitney never thought she wanted to settle down. With her suave and handsome partner, Jeff Stevens, she’d been responsible for some of the world’s most astounding heists, relishing the danger and intensity of life on the wild side. But there is still one thing missing from Tracy’s perfect life: a baby.

At first “going straight” feels like a new adventure. But as the months pass and Tracy’s longed for pregnancy doesn’t happen, she finds herself yearning for the adrenaline rush of the old days.  When a mysterious and beautiful stranger enters their lives, Tracy and Jeff’s once unbreakable partnership is suddenly blown wide open. Jeff wakes one morning to find Tracy gone, vanished without a trace.

For more than a decade, a broken Jeff struggles to carry on knowing Tracy is out there somewhere. But the rest of the world believes Tracy Whitney is dead . . . until a series of murders leads a tenacious French detective to her doorstep. Eleven victims, in ten different cities, over nine years—all of the cities where Tracy pulled off some of her most brilliant capers. Someone is targeting her, manipulating a series of disturbing events and raising terrifying ghosts she thought were dead and buried.

Once again, this clever woman finds herself out on the edge, playing the odds in a desperate game of roulette. But this time, she’s got everything to lose—including the man she cannot forget.

Tomorrow has come at last. But it isn’t the future Tracy bargained for . . .

Reviews

  • Not up to the mark!

    1
    By Csolly18
    Sidney Sheldon wrote books with a certain character in mind. This 'central character' was always a strong woman who'd had a difficult life and was full of mysteries. His books would make you fall in love with this character, at times even compare some of your characteristics with 'hers'. This book picks up previous character Tracy, but does nothing to add to her strength. She's projected as a mere lover, mother and housewife. This book's a 'regular thriller' with no objective in mind. You have to read the previous book that featured Tracy Whitney to get some continuity. There are silly spelling mistakes: like on page 415, 'know' is spelt as 'now'. Even a child knows that the plural for amoeba is 'amoebae'. It's spelt as amoebas on page 91.