Dr. John Sanders has given Rebecca Brownell a new chance at life. After an isolated childhood, an abused adolescence, and an institutionalized existence, Rebecca is finally free to conquer her demons and build a promising life.
However, just as it appears Rebecca has achieved her dreams, eerily personal letters begin arriving in the mail. Letters sent from an unidentified source who knows far … knows far more about her past than anyone should. Letters which question and threaten Rebecca’s sanity.
Unauthored Letters is the inspiring tale of a woman’s troubled past, a man’s quest to protect her, and their fight against a mysterious foe. It’s a story of trust strained by illness, love tried by lies, and promises terrorized by elusive danger.
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a little drawn out but good reading.
I have to agree with what other reviewers have said, the book started out very interesting and on the right track but about midway through became too frustratingly unbelievable that I really had to force myself finish thinking it was about to recover.
Not interested
I did manage to finish this book, although I had to force myself through the last half. The premise was sound and the book started off well enough that I continued to read. However, during the latter half of the story, the situations became unlikely enough that I started to really struggle. The time leaps were abrupt and sometimes extremely …
The first book was much better.
I did not like this book. Stopped reading it
Didn’t finish reading this one.
The plot was good. Too many details though. I skipped so many pages just to get to the main plot. It was ok.
Dr. John Sanders helps a wrongly institutionalized Rebecca Brownell and is fired for his efforts. Two years later he marries her and they have a child.
Seemingly out of nowhere, Rebecca starts to relapse. She is seeing things and soon after each event she gets a letter concerning what she saw. She is convinced what she is seeing is real, …