English, asked by reenakhunti90, 2 months ago

what made mr Agarwal suspicious about the second women customer?​

Answers

Answered by negiabhishek236
1

Answer:

Beware of books bearing flim-flam. Here we have a first novel from A.J. Finn, a complete unknown, with a front cover spouting: "It isn't paranoia if it's really happening." An inside letter touts publishing gold: "Sold for record advances in 35 countries," and film rights pre-emptively sold with "A-list actresses clamouring for the role." Along with the usual plaudits from known authors – Gillian Flynn, Louise Penny – and the essential reference to The Girl on the Train, we get the unhappy news (to a reviewer) that A.J. Finn is "one of us" – that is, a publishing insider. The ancient joke about Abraham Lincoln's doctor's dog dances in my head. "Insiders" all too often put together a batch of what the public buys into a potboiled mess and then market it as caviar. So I approach The Woman in the Window (even the title is suspect) with suspicion. The epigraph is from the old film noir Shadow of a Doubt, one of my favourites. If A.J. Finn favours that, he/she must have something on the ball.

Answered by technicalharuji786
0

Answer:

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