Author:Carsten Stroud
When two plane crashes set off a spellbinding chain reaction of murder, inadvertent kidnapping, corporate corruption and financial double-dealing, Niceville detective Nick Kavanaugh has to investigate.
To add to his worries, he and his wife, Kate, have also just taken in brutally orphaned Rainey Teague. Something bothers Nick about Rainey - and it isn't just that the woman in charge of attendance at Rainey's school has suspiciously disappeared. In fact, people have long been disappearing from seemingly placid Niceville, including, most disturbingly, Kate's father.
Using his files, Kate and Nick start to unearth Niceville's blood-stained history, but something (or is it Nothing?) stands in their way ...
Chuck in an old ghost story and an Indian no-go area and you're deep in Stephen King country - and loving it!
—— Sunday SportSupremely accomplished storytelling
—— Daily MailJames Hayman's Portland is every bit as dark and sinister as Lehane's Boston or Connelly's LA
—— Richard Montanari[Adam Thorpe] brings an unusual freshness and zip to the task, which goes some way towards returning us to that sense of unnerving immediacy which the young Zola's novel would have given its readers in 1867
—— Nicholas White , Times Literary SupplementThis story seeps into your insides
—— Kate WinsletI love this because it's the story of how you can't escape the inevitabilities of love and it's just a fantastic piece of writing
—— Sue Perkins , ExpressBy merging elements of the gothic and tragic with a study of petit-bourgeois banality, Zola created a work of enduring fascination
—— ObserverIt was attacked by critics of the day as stinking filth and a foul sewer. Little wonder, then, that it became an instant bestseller and I'll admit I was completely riveted by its melodramatics from start to finish
—— Daily MailA thrilling read
—— Joseph Fiennes , ExpressA very dark book but a magnificent read
—— Kirsty WarkA terrifying roller-coaster
—— Myles McWeeney , Belfast TelegraphIt's easy to see why his books are mega-sellers – those enormous, pulsating plots drag you in without mercy... Compulsive
—— Iain Finlayson/Kate Saunders , Saga MagazineIn Harry Hole, [Nesbo has] created the most complex, compelling and at times frustrating detective... Probably his best yet
—— Cherie Blair , Mail on SundayFans of the series will know what to expect, and won't be disappointed
—— EscapismScandi-noir fans will be delighted
—— Daily ExpressComplicated, fast-moving… A skillfully put-together thriller
—— Independent on SundaySince the death of Ian Fleming, plenty of writers have tried their hand at perpetuating the career of James Bond, with mixed results. Boyd’s Solo is undoubtedly one of the best.
—— Mail on SundayA triumphant thriller worthy of Bond’s creator Ian Fleming.
—— Daily ExpressI found myself wondering if Boyd had outdone Fleming.
—— Nicholas Lezard , Guardian[Boyd is] an ideal writer of James Bond novels, and this one, his first, is very good
—— William Leith , Evening StandardPerfectly judged homage
—— Mail on SundayA brand new James Bond adventure combining all the glamour and excitement of Fleming’s original novels with the masterful storytelling of William Boyd
—— Western Morning NewsA very good piece of literary ventriloquism, with a great baddie
—— Heathrow ExpressFleming’s James Bond lives again in this perfectly judged homage
—— Mail on Sunday