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http://worldcat.org/entity/work/id/257333207

The boy on the bus a novel

Meg Landry expected it to be a day like any other -- her asthmatic eight-year-old son would step off the bus, home from school. But on this day, the boy on the bus is not Meg's son -- or at least doesn't appear to be. This new boy shares Charlie's copper hair, tea-brown eyes, and slight frame. But there is something profoundly, if indefinably, different about him. He has a finer nose, his skin is shinier, and his face looks more mature, as if he has grown into being Charlie more than the real Charlie ever had. In the wake of Meg's quiet alarm, her far-flung family returns home, and a jangly unease sets in. Neither Charlie's father, Jeff, nor Charlie's rebellious teenage sister, Katie, can help Meg settle the question of the boy. They look to her for certainty -- after all, shouldn't a mother know her own child' In this daring novel, Deborah Schupack dissects a family stretched out along the seams of postmodern small-town life. With the precision of a literary wordsmith, Schupack has crafted an extraordinary tale of a mother's love for her son and a mystery that may ultimately rip them apart. Tense and atmospheric, this debut is a rare combination of intellectual sophistication and page-turning suspense.

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http://schema.org/description

  • "Meg Landry expected it to be a day like any other -- her asthmatic eight-year-old son would step off the bus, home from school. But on this day, the boy on the bus is not Meg's son -- or at least doesn't appear to be. This new boy shares Charlie's copper hair, tea-brown eyes, and slight frame. But there is something profoundly, if indefinably, different about him. He has a finer nose, his skin is shinier, and his face looks more mature, as if he has grown into being Charlie more than the real Charlie ever had. In the wake of Meg's quiet alarm, her far-flung family returns home, and a jangly unease sets in. Neither Charlie's father, Jeff, nor Charlie's rebellious teenage sister, Katie, can help Meg settle the question of the boy. They look to her for certainty -- after all, shouldn't a mother know her own child' In this daring novel, Deborah Schupack dissects a family stretched out along the seams of postmodern small-town life. With the precision of a literary wordsmith, Schupack has crafted an extraordinary tale of a mother's love for her son and a mystery that may ultimately rip them apart. Tense and atmospheric, this debut is a rare combination of intellectual sophistication and page-turning suspense."@en
  • "Noting strange differences in the boy who returns home from school that makes her suspect he is not her son, Meg Landry is unable to get support for her fearful theory from her husband or her rebellious teenage daughter."
  • "Meg Landry, a rural Vermont at-home mother, is disturbed to find that the child she picks up from the school bus one day is not quite her child--he looks like Charlie, but with slight, significant differences, presenting a mystery that brings Meg face-to-face with her family's dysfunction."
  • "A woman discovers that the boy on the school bus outside her door is almost, but not quite, her eight-year-old asthmatic son, Charlie."@en

http://schema.org/genre

  • "Domestic fiction"
  • "Domestic fiction"@en
  • "Psychological fiction"
  • "Psychological fiction"@en
  • "Electronic books"@en
  • "Fiction"
  • "Fiction"@en

http://schema.org/name

  • "The boy on the bus a novel"@en
  • "The boy on the bus"
  • "The boy on the bus"@en
  • "The boy on the bus : a novel"