



All Good People Here
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- $229.00
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- $229.00
Descripción editorial
*A gripping debut thriller from the host of the #1 podcast CRIME JUNKIE*
THE NO.1 NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER
If you liked I’LL BE GONE IN THE DARK and SHARP OBJECTS, you will love this!
'A stunning debut from a fresh new voice in the thriller space'
—Karin Slaughter
‘This is the perfect gripping, twisty thriller for fans of cold crime cases’
—Cosmopolitan
What really happened to January Jacobs?
A MYSTERIOUS COLD CASE…
Twenty-five years ago, January Jacob’s parents awoke to find their daughter’s bed empty, a horrifying message spray-painted onto their wall. Hours later, January’s body was found discarded in a ditch. Her murder was never solved. But the town remembers.
A DANGEROUS OBSESSION…
Journalist Margot Davies is tired of reporting meaningless stories. One night, she stumbles upon a clue in the most infamous crime in her hometown’s history: the unsolved murder of six-year-old January.
A TOWN FULL OF SECRETS…
As Margot digs deeper, she begins to suspect that there is something truly sinister lurking in the small community: a secret that endangers the lives of everyone involved…including Margot.
A gripping, twisty thriller for fans of cold crime cases – from the #1 CRIME JUNKIE podcast host Ashley Flowers.
About the author
Ashley is the host of the #1 hit true-crime podcast Crime Junkie. Since first airing in 2017, Crime Junkie has quickly become one of the most popular podcasts (in all categories) available, and with over 34 million monthly listens and 10 million unique listeners each month, has established Ashley’s status as a go-to source for those looking for a forensic fix. ALL GOOD PEOPLE HERE satisfies this craving with a wholly engrossing, edge-of-your-seat, can’t-put-it-down mystery, with an ending you won’t see coming. It will be published by Ballantine in the US in 2022.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Flowers, the host of the true crime podcast Crime Junkie, debuts with a twisty psychological thriller coauthored with Kiester (The Truth About Ben and June). Twenty-five years after the unsolved murder of Margot Davies's childhood best friend, January Jacobs (forever frozen in public memory—shades of JonBenét Ramsey—as that tiny dancer looking disturbingly older than six in her skimpy competition costume), Margot remains haunted by the case, as well as the way pious finger-pointing in her hometown of Wakarusa, Ind., helped shatter her surviving family. So when duty drags Margot, now a crime reporter for an Indianapolis newspaper, back to Wakarusa to care for the ailing uncle who raised her, she hopes this might be her chance to crack the case—especially once, less than a day after her arrival, a five-year-old vanishes in a neighboring town. The reporter swiftly discovers that the townsfolk she once thought she knew may have been concealing far more complex and problematic passions than apparent back then to a child such as herself. This intricate, intriguing puzzler should surprise even those readers certain they know where the plot's heading. Flowers is off to a promising start.