To the Power of Three
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Testing the limits of loyalty
REVIEW BY LESLIE BUDEWITZ In a Baltimore suburb built on dreams of success, three girls play out a variation of Benjamin Franklin's adage, an epigraph to this engaging psychological thriller: three can keep a secret, if two are dead. As To the Power of Three opens, an unidentified high-school senior forgoes fashion in favor of a more practical method of carrying a gun. An hour later, in a locked bathroom, one girl is dead, one is critically injured and one is lying. What appears at first to be the truth behind this horrific tragedy masks what really happenedin the bathroom, and among the three girls who have been friends for 10 years: Kat, sweet and smart, the daughter of a man who's living his thwarted dreams through his only child. Perri, an aspiring actress who decides to expose the truth about her lifelong friend. Josie, the athlete, who came to the trio late and never feels certain of her position in the friendship triangle. Lippman knows what Baltimore County looks like. She knows what matters to its teenagers, and how insider kids torture the outsiders. And just as Lippman knows the importance of the right shoes, especially to the girl who can't afford hundred-dollar sandals, she clearly also remembers how it feels to walk in them. To the Power of Three lets readers walk that same treacherous path.
Leslie Budewitz lives in Montana and is a legal consultant for writers.
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