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You've Been Warned - Again
You've Been Warned - Again
Oct 9, 2024 10:18 AM

Author:James Patterson

You've Been Warned - Again

James Patterson’s BookShots. Short, fast-paced, high-impact entertainment.

Going home for the holidays can be murder.

Joanie was dreading Thanksgiving with her family at their strange new house. And that was before she saw her brother Alan standing in the kitchen. It was hard to know what to say to him, seeing as he'd died five years ago...

Reviews

Praise for Tim Weaver

—— -

Weaver's books get better each time - tense, complex, written with flair as well as care

—— Guardian

The writing is beautiful and the plot so cleverly constructed I never guessed any of the twists

—— Claire Douglas , Sunday Times bestselling author of Local Girl Missing

It had me racing to the end

—— Fiona Barton , Sunday Times bestselling author of The Widow

Terrific

—— Sunday Times

I couldn't put it down

—— Sun

Weaver has become one of this country's most respected, bestselling crime writers, and he fully deserves to be . . . Catch him at once

—— Daily Mail

The rising star of British crime

—— Tony Parsons , Sunday Times Number One bestselling author of the DC Max Wolfe series

Tim Weaver writes books so meticulously researched that the reader is educated as well as entertained, enthralled and intrigued

—— Liz Nugent , Sunday Times bestselling author of Lying in Wait

A dark, complex and visceral read

—— Financial Times

Fans of Mo Hayder will be in seventh hell

—— Guardian

The story-telling is little short of brilliant

—— Crime Fiction Lover

Perfect plotting, great characterisation, and the kind of payoff that a thriller of this calibre deserves

—— Bookgeeks

Clever, grown-up and totally gripping

—— Lisa Jewell

A topical, tense and addictive read

—— Good Housekeeping

The Good Girl looks set to be the next Gone Girl, with its dark compelling exploration of family secrets . . .

—— Seven Books to Read, House Seven

Neill takes a light scalpel to online disaster in this exceptional dual-narrative

—— Grazia

Cracking

—— Prima

Two families become embroiled in each other's lives and long buried secrets are unravelled. Contemporary issues are tackled here with both humour and realism, making for an engrossing read

—— My Weekly

Neill's characters are so cleverly depicted, you feel as if you've met at least one of them before

—— Vogue

beautifully told… the reader is taken from heartbreak to hope via a series of twists and turns worthy of the best thrillers

—— LivingEDGE

highly entertaining

—— In Style

‘In this dark and captivating novel, the different strands slowly but surely come together, and the result is that rare thing – a thriller that will break your heart’

—— Metro

Taut psychological thriller that’s as sinister as it is thrilling. A real unputdownable effort that examines morality and privilege

—— Love It!

Smart, seductive… A sophisticated page-turner

—— Mackenzie Dawson , Angle News

Osborne is a literary writer – and a brilliant one – and this sumptuously written superbly observed study of misplaced idealism and moral expediency reads a bit like a thriller penned by F Scott Fitzgerald

—— Metro

Malevolent, gripping… A compelling read, acutely observed and beautifully written. For all the character defects of the principal protagonists, the reader wants to find out what happens to them. It matters. And there can be no higher praise than that

—— Richard Hopton , Country & Town House

This complex, thrilling novel focuses on Naomi Codrington, a young lawyer who befriends Samantha, a malleable American teenager, while summering with her father and stepmother on the Greek island of Hydra. When they find a Syrian refugee washed up on the shore, calamity comes rushes in.

—— The Mail on Sunday

Thrilling, chilling and contains the following subtext: best stay at home

—— Strong Words

Birdcage Walk offers a persuasively grimy period evocation of contemporary domestic peril facing women, not least in an agonising childbirth scene that has traumatic consequences

—— Anthony Cummins , Metro

Gripping historical drama

—— Irish Country Magazine

A story of idealism and possessive love, with strong and memorable characters

—— Choice Magazine

Helen definitely has a deft touch when it comes to history but the vividness of Lizzie and Diner's relationship is what stands out in glorious literary 3D. Speaking as someone raised in Bristol, I'll never be able to gaze down into the Gorge again without seeing that rowing boat. Bleak can be hauntingly beautiful and between these covers Helen demonstrates how

—— The Bookbag

She vividly brings to live the struggle of women’s lives in late 18th century Bristol, and I recommend the book for an insight into Bristol in another time

—— Western Daily Press

From the swish of a silk dress, to the whoosh of the guillotine, Dunmore uses words with economic precision to build up the detail and suspense of this novel. Which haunts the reader just as the characters in it are haunted by the dead.

—— The Tablet

Flawless final historical novel from the late, great Helen Dunmore

—— Woman & Home

A lively and inventive voice … by all account as brilliant as her other books

—— Good Housekeeping

Early feminism and a hint of Grand Designs: a great mix’

—— i paper
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