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Secrets don't die. It’s the first week of senior year at Meadowbrook Academy. For Amy and her best friend Sarah, that means late-night parties at the boathouse, bike rides through their sleepy Connecticut town, and the crisp beginning of a New England fall. Then tragedy strikes: Sarah and her boyfriend are brutally murdered in their dorm room. Now the week Amy has been dreaming about for years has turned into a nightmare, especially when all eyes turn to her as the culprit. She was Sarah’s only roommate, the only other person there when she died—or so she told the police to cover for her own boyfriend’s suspicious whereabouts. And even though they were best friends, with every passing day, Amy begins to learn that Sarah lied about a lot of things. Liz, editor of the school newspaper and social outcast, is determined to uncover the truth about what happened on campus, in hopes her reporting will land a prestigious scholarship to college. As Liz dives deeper into her investigation, the secrets these murdered seniors never wanted out come to light. The deeper Liz digs, the messier the truth becomes – and with a killer still on campus, she can’t afford to make any mistakes.
It became a home-away-from-home for America’s “greatest generation.” “Coming to you live from Frank Dailey’s Meadowbrook, Route 23, the Newark-Pompton Turnpike in Cedar Grove, New Jersey,” said the announcer in those all-so-familiar radio broadcasts beamed at home and abroad. This is where Frank Sinatra sang with the Dorsey Brothers in the age of swing and the big bands. Glenn Miller. Harry James. Kay Kraser. All played here, and more. It’s time came and – oh, so quickly – went. In the 1960s, it made history again at a premiere dinner-theater in the round, drawing Van Johnson and scores of other headliners of the day. Finally, it became a rock ‘n’ roll venue, drawing the likes of Duran Duran, Cyndi Lauper, and The Romantics, until one late evening its last DJ spun Glenn Miller’s “In the Mood,” not knowing it marked an eerie farewell to arguably America’s greatest music venue of its time.
The Meadowbrook Club, founded in 1909, was a club originally for the employees of John Wanamaker (Firm), Philadelphia, for encouraging exercise and physical training and promoting competitive athletic events.
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