Book Review - Stranger in the Mirror by Sidney Sheldon

Stranger In The Mirror by Sidney Sheldon

A Tale of Twisted Identities and Deadly Obsessions

Genre:
The narrative is filled with twists and turns that will keep you guessing until the very end. Sheldon's masterful storytelling is on full display in this novel, as he weaves together a complex web of lies and deception.

Title: Stranger In The Mirror

Author: Sidney Sheldon

Publisher: Harper

Genre: Crime Thriller

First Publication: 1976

Language: English

Major Characters: Toby Temple, Jill Castle, Clifton Lawrence, David Kenyon

Setting Place: Hollywood, USA

Narration: Third Person

Theme:  Emotional extremes of success and failure and how people inevitably become victims of time.

 

Book Summary: Stranger In The Mirror

Stranger in the Mirror is a 1976 novel written by Sidney Sheldon. The novel is one of the earliest of Sheldon’s works, but contains the typical Sheldon fast-paced narration and several narrative techniques, with the exception of a twist ending. The novel tells the life story of two fictitious Hollywood celebrities – Toby Temple and Jill Castle.

From humble beginnings, Toby Temple becomes a superstar. He knows what he wants – and he always makes sure he gets what he wants. He is the world’s funniest comedian, loved by presidents, lusted after by women. But, deep down, he yearns for love and stability. Jill Castle has always been an outsider, desperate to be accepted. Despite her great beauty, she finds breaking into Hollywood as an actress impossible without auditioning on the Directors’ infamous casting couches. But, with one glance, Toby falls for Jill’s beauty and sweeps her out of obscurity to stardom by his side. Now, she can get the revenge she has always longed for…

Book Review - Stranger in the Mirror by Sidney Sheldon

Book Review: Stranger In The Mirror

Every coin has two sides. If you think Toby Temple is just a plain jerk when you start reading the book Stranger In The Mirror, you might be wrong because he’s the kind of person who’s willing to waive medical bills of a dying person. But he’s still a jerk, who manipulate others to feed his own insecurities. After making a teen pregnant during high school, Toby fled away from his hometown and his sin to pursue his mother’s dream to see him successful someday. Meanwhile on the other end, Josephine Czinski changed her name to Jill Castle and fled away from her hometown to mend her broken heart after she saw her mother bringing the old wedding dress for the wedding of David Kenyon and Cissy Topping.

There’s not much difference between Jill and Toby. Both of them are very much the same, full of vengeance and ill feelings towards the world.

The story took a twist when Toby met Jill, together they rule Hollywood and show the world the dark side of the show business. At the end of the story, revenge outruled peace and happiness. Sad to see Toby and Jill’s life ended in a very sad way. Both of them were eaten by their own creed and vengeance.

The only thing that I didn’t like so much is the amorality of the main characters. They were vengeful, wicked, ungrateful.

Sidney Sheldon’s portrayal of the showbiz world in Stranger in the Mirror was simply staggering and informative. Well, he was in that business for decades, so he knew what he was talking about. Nonetheless, Sheldon has done it again! The twists were so unexpected, I didn’t see Jill’s last cruel action and David’s secret coming.

More on this topic

Comments

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Readers also enjoyed

Our Perfect Storm by Carley Fortune

In Our Perfect Storm, Carley Fortune returns with a friends-to-lovers romance set against the misty rainforests of Tofino. After Frankie is jilted on her wedding day, her childhood best friend George whisks her onto her honeymoon to mend her heart. A sea-soaked, sensory, emotionally honest read about belonging to yourself and to someone who has always known you.

The Calamity Club by Kathryn Stockett

Kathryn Stockett's long-awaited return, The Calamity Club, follows three women in 1933 Oxford, Mississippi who refuse to take what life has handed them: an eleven-year-old orphan with a sharp mouth, a chinless small-town spinster, and a desperate mother running on fumes. Funny, occasionally baggy, and full of women you do not forget after the last page.

The Faith of Beasts by James S.A. Corey

The Faith of Beasts by James S.A. Corey, the second book in The Captive's War trilogy, is patient, brutal, and deeply human, with comparable reads from Tchaikovsky and Martine.

I Could Give You the Moon by Ann Liang

With I Could Give You the Moon, Ann Liang returns to Airington with a glamorous, slow-burn YA romance about social media masks, missing brothers, and a love that asks for everything

Too Close to Home by Seraphina Nova Glass

Seraphina Nova Glass returns with a three-POV thriller set in a lakefront community where a Labor Day car bomb cracks open every polite secret in the neighborhood. Sharp dialogue, a strong front half, and rich motherhood stakes carry the book. The back third gets crowded, but the voice work and book-club bait are real.

Popular stories

The narrative is filled with twists and turns that will keep you guessing until the very end. Sheldon's masterful storytelling is on full display in this novel, as he weaves together a complex web of lies and deception. Stranger In The Mirror by Sidney Sheldon