Body Double
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- Pre-Order
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- Expected 3 Mar 2026
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- 12,99 €
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- Pre-Order
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- 12,99 €
Publisher Description
A surreal thriller that blurs the lines between lies and truth, between the selves we conceal and the faces we show the world.
As winter descends and the city fills with the scent of woodsmoke, a young transcriber follows the same routine each day. She collects tapes from a ghostwriter’s office, stops for an espresso and croissant, and returns home to type out the voices of strangers — stories that will become someone else’s novels. Her solitary life is predictable, unremarkable … until the day she hears something different on the tapes: a message meant only for her.
Across the city, two women, Laura and Naomi, accidentally swap coats at a department store cafe. This brief encounter sparks something electric and strange, and soon, Laura has moved in with Naomi. As the days pass, she begins to mirror her more and more closely — her gestures, her habits, her very essence. Slowly, deliberately, Laura starts to take over Naomi’s life.
Meanwhile, the transcriber makes a disturbing discovery: she is beginning to disappear …
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Johansson (Antiquity) explores themes of doppelgängers, loneliness, and selfhood in her sly latest. The dizzying hall-of-mirrors narrative unfolds on two tracks, beginning with an isolated and yearning woman named Naomi who meets an enchanting stranger named Laura after they mistakenly wind up with each other's coats at a café. When they meet again at the same café, Laura confesses that their first meeting frightened her and that she's seen Naomi around since then, suggesting Naomi might be her doppelgänger ("I have seen you.... Have you seen me?"). A parallel narrative follows an unnamed woman who lives alone and works as a transcriptionist for a ghostwriter. One day, she plays a client's tape that is silent save for a woman's whisper, "I have seen you. Have you seen me?" The transcriptionist takes the question to be directed at her, despite the fact that she's "more invisible than the ghostwriter himself." Shaken, she begins to feel like she's "disappearing," or is "split in two." Johansson artfully teases out the echoes between the narrative threads, as Naomi and Laura see each other again and move in together and Laura unsettles Naomi by copying her clothing and hairstyle, even impersonating her on the phone. By the end, the two story lines seamlessly converge. Readers will be entranced.