Sophie Hannah is a Sunday Times, New York Times and Amazon Kindle UK No. 1 bestselling author and her books have sold millions of copies worldwide. She writes contemporary psychological thrillers and, at the request of Agatha Christie's family and estate, the new series of Hercule Poirot novels. She lives in Cambridge with her family.
'This is Sophie Hannah at her wry, ingenious best. A super-relateable what-would-you-do, with a sting in the tail on the very last line. Don't miss it.' Gillian McAllister 'Funny, clever and audacious. I bloody loved it!' Jennie Godfrey, author of The List of Suspicious Things 'An incident involving a dog in a small village escalates to an all-out conflict, turning neighbour against neighbour, and culminating in murder. But who did it? Who was it done to? You'll have to read to the final line to find out! Hugely entertaining and infectiously funny, this joyous adventure is one of Sophie Hannah's very best books. A delight from start to finish.' Alex Michaelides, bestselling author of The Silent Patient ‘I loved this. Such a clever, twisty book with as many layers as a matryoshka doll plus I loved the meta-fictive aspects. Works on so many levels. Bravo!’ Harriet Tyce 'Clever, cunning and completely captivating' Louise Swanson, author of End of Story 'Brilliance, with a twist worthy of Agatha Christie herself' S E Lynes, author of The Housewarming ‘A murder mystery about the lengths you would go to to protect the person you love. It is a ferocious battle between good and evil, a tense, page-turner of a book, with so many clever avenues, plus the most enormous plot twist (Agatha would be in awe). As if that wasn’t enough, it’s also incredibly funny, extremely entertaining, and a brilliant study of human behaviour. I have loved Sophie’s writing since I read Little Face many (many) years ago because she is the absolute queen of plot and pace. This will keep you guessing until the end, but you will feel so flippin’ smug when you get to the last page and finally work it out (I finished it hours ago and am still smiling at myself)’ Joanna Cannon, author of The Trouble with Goats and Sheep