Bad
A gripping, dark and outrageously funny thriller
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- CHF 9.00
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- CHF 9.00
Beschreibung des Verlags
The new sizzler in the Mad, Bad and Dangerous to Know trilogy!
'Revenge will be sweet - and in this case, extremely funny' New
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She stole the life she wanted. Now someone wants to steal it back . . .
Alvie Knightly may be waking up in the Ritz, but her life is no bed of roses.
Firstly, she has the mother of all hangovers.
Secondly, her beautiful, spoiled twin sister Beth has just been found dead in Sicily - and the police want Alvie for questioning.
And thirdly, Alvie's hot new boyfriend has vanished with every penny of the millions they stole from Beth . . .
But he picked the wrong girl to mess with.
Alvie will pursue her ex to Rome in a game of cat and mouse that only one of them can survive.
Hell hath no fury like a woman scorned . . . But can Alvie get revenge before her crimes catch up with her?
Readers LOVE Bad:
'I couldn't put it down'
'This is the most fun you'll have with a book this summer. I loved it.'
'I fell straight into the story. I loved the chase, the thrill, the ending . . . just all of it.'
Loved Bad? Why not read more about Alvie in Dangerous to Know . . .
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
In the opening chapter of Esposito's overwrought second thriller featuring Alvie Knightly (after 2017's Mad), Alvie's twin sister, Beth, slips and hits her head before falling into the swimming pool of her Sicilian villa. Alvie, who was with Beth at the pool's edge, does nothing to save her from drowning. By chapter's end, Alvie, now posing as Beth, has murdered or arranged the murder of a number of men, including Beth's mob-connected husband, before running off with assassin Nino and 2 million to London, where they check into the Ritz. The next morning, Nino steals the euros and leaves her with no clothes. But the resourceful Alvie soon is chasing Nino across Europe with revenge on her mind, using her sister's passport. The plot spins along on wry humor, well-placed pop culture references, and Alvie's outsized personality. But Alvie's self-centeredness and perpetual lack of self-control gets tiresome after a while. Some readers won't be in a hurry to spend more time with her in the trilogy's conclusion.