Mother May I - 'Brilliantly unnerving' The Sunday Times Thriller of the Month
Verlag | Bloomsbury Trade |
Auflage | 2021 |
Seiten | 336 |
Format | 15,6 x 3,4 x 23,3 cm |
Gewicht | 516 g |
Artikeltyp | Englisches Buch |
EAN | 9781526633859 |
Bestell-Nr | 52663385UA |
A stranger has taken Bree's baby - and she won't get him back alive unless she performs one small task. But nothing is ever that easy...A pulse-racing, heart-pounding domestic thriller that will have you turning the pages in the race to save Bree's baby, and find the kidnapper
Klappentext:
'Brilliantly unnerving ... expertly crafted' Sunday Times, Thriller of the Month 'Jackson raises the stakes again and again' Guardian'Finely paced, shrewdly observed ... Mother May I is a thinking (and feeling) reader's thriller' Wall Street JournalIt's every mother's worst nightmare. 'If you ever want to see your baby again, GO HOME. Tell no one.Do not call the police. Do not call your husband. Be at your house by 5:15 PM. Or he's gone for good...'To get her son back alive, Bree must complete one small but critical task. It seems harmless enough, but this one action comes with a devastating price. And now Bree finds herself complicit in a terrible crime, caught up in a tangled web of secrets that threatens to destroy the perfect life she has built.Mother May I is a pulse-racing, heart-pounding thriller that will have you turning the pages in the race to save Bree's baby, and find the kidnapper.Praise for Joshilyn Jackson'Jackson writes the kind of book that will set even the most blameless on edge, leaving us to wonder who might know our imperfect histories' Christina Dalcher'A master of domestic suspense' Entertainment Weekly'Wonderful - suspense and surprises, real characters and a scary, ominous backbeat' Lee Child
Rezension:
Jackson follows her brilliantly unnerving Never Have I Ever with another battle of wits between a manipulative criminal and her victim ... Bree and Marshall's twin narratives sustain the unrelenting tension all the way to a double denouement; yet this is much more than an expertly crafted entertainment, as its themes include class, sexual consent and misogyny Thriller of the Month Sunday Times