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A Double Life

On sale

13th June 2019

Price: £9.99

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Selected: Paperback / ISBN-13: 9781474607032

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FROM FLYNN BERRY, AUTHOR OF REESE WITHERSPOON’S BOOK CLUB PICK NORTHERN SPY

Who is Claire’s father?

A privileged man, surrounded by devoted friends and a family he adores?

Or the deranged killer who attacked Claire’s mother and then vanished in thin air?

For thirty years Claire has been obsessed with uncovering the mystery at the heart of her life, and she knows her father’s friends – wealthy, powerful, ruthless – hold the key to the truth.

They know where Claire’s father is. And it’s time their perfect lives met her fury.

‘A thrilling page-turner’ Paula Hawkins
‘Shocking’ New York Times
‘What a book!’ Clare Mackintosh
‘Satisfyingly ominous’ Observer
‘It left me heartbroken’ Fiona Barton
‘Psychological suspense has a new reigning queen’ New York Journal of Books

Reviews

Paula Hawkins, author of THE GIRL ON THE TRAIN and INTO THE WATER
Flynn Berry vividly re-imagines one of the most notorious crimes of the 20th century. A Double Life is a thrilling page-turner, but it is also a compassionate and angry book: with forensic precision, Berry picks apart lives derailed by violence and the ways in which class privilege protect the guilty.'
Clare Mackintosh, author of I LET YOU GO, I SEE YOU and LET ME LIE
What a book! A skilful and compelling exploration of families, crime, and class.
Fiona Barton, author of THE WIDOW and THE CHILD
Clever, thrilling writing that wound me in and left me heartbroken when I turned the last page and realised it was over.
Seattle Times
Astute... With exquisite pacing, Edgar Award-winner Berry (Under the Harrow) guides us to a stunning conclusion.
CrimeReads (11 Crime Novels You Should Read This Summer)
Berry's sophomore effort is just as smart and haunting as her Edgar-winning debut, Under the Harrow
Good Housekeeping (The 25 Best New Books for Summer 2018)
Thrilling
New York Journal of Books
Psychological suspense has a new reigning queen
Laura Lippman, author of SUNBURN (O Magazine, Summer’s Best True Crime-Inspired Thrillers
Thrilling
New York Times, Editor's Choice
Flynn Berry writes thrillingly about women raging against a world that protects cruel and careless men. She's less preoccupied by scenes of abuse than the psychological toll of its threat. Her protagonists seethe over their knowledge of violence and are fueled by a howling grief for its victims. Berry proved in Under the Harrow that her prose can be as blistering as it is lush. Here, too, the writing is rich and moody, without any unnecessary fuss... The ending is as shocking as it is satisfying.
Good Housekeeping UK
A quietly menacing thriller by up-and-coming talent Flynn Berry.
Sarra Manning, Red Online
A Double Life isn't just a whodunit but a damning dissection on class and privilege too. Fans of Elizabeth Day's The Party will love this.
Fanny Blake, Woman & Home
A detailed and compelling story of a family's fallout from a brutal crime, and the search for truth and retribution.
i - Independent, Best Beach Reads for Summer
Berry gives the well-worn story of Lord Lucan a fresh twist with this clever tale which tells the story of a woman determined to bring her father's high society friends to justice.
Mail on Sunday
Engrossing
Prima
A stifling air of unease builds with every page
Observer
Berry skips between Claire's present-day investigations and her reconstruction of her parents' lives almost three decades earlier in this beautifully paced and satisfyingly ominous story.
The Sunday Times
As well as confirming the promise of Berry's debut, Under the Harrow, the book demonstrates that fusing fiction and true crime can be mesmerisingly effective.
Daily Mail
A compulsive page-turner
Guardian
[An] interesting ... reimagining of the Lord Lucan story... Berry brings the story to a satisfyingly shocking conclusion.
Spectator
There are obvious hints of the Lucan case, but Berry makes the story her own, weaving in details that snag at the mind's edge... The story dances between rage and compassion. This struggle between opposing values propels the book to its startling conclusion