Read more
Informationen zum Autor Julia Heaberlin is the internationally bestselling author of six thrillers, including Black-Eyed Susans , Paper Ghosts , We Are All the Same in the Dark and Night Will Find You . Her books have sold to more than twenty countries and have been optioned for film. Black-Eyed Susans was a Sunday Times number two bestseller and a Radio 2 Book Club selection, as well as Waterstones Thriller of the Month. Before writing novels, Heaberlin was an award-winning journalist, which fed her interest in true crime and the forgotten stories of victims, a theme she carries into her fiction. She lives with her family in Texas. Klappentext Julia Heaberlin is an award-winning journalist. She has also edited numerous real-life thriller stories, including a series on the perplexing and tragic murders of girls buried in the Mexican desert and another on domestic violence. She lives with her husband and son in Texas. Her previous novel , Black-Eyed Susans, was a Sunday Times number two bestseller and a Simon Mayo Radio 2 Book Club selection as well as Waterstones Thriller of the Month. Zusammenfassung The unputdownable thriller from the bestselling author of Black-Eyed Susans. 'Gripping' The Times ____________ Long ago, Carl Feldman was acquitted of murder. Now he's an old man, living alone with his fading memories. His daughter has come to see him, to take him on a trip. Only she's not his daughter, and if she has her way, he's not coming back . . . This woman is sure Carl's a murderer, and that he's killed others - including her sister Rachel. And she will stop at nothing to find out the truth. ____________ 'Wonderful . . . creepy . . . a work of art' Sunday Express 'A beautifully written and extraordinary book' Sophie Hannah 'Strong characterisation, haunting images, a wonderful sense of place . . . well worth the read' Guardian ...
Report
Heaberlin's latest thriller is at once a zany, dialogue-propelled two-hander, a murder mystery, a road trip, a pair of psychological case studies and a meditation on photography The Sunday Times