Into the Water
The addictive Sunday Times No. 1 bestseller
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- € 8,99
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- € 8,99
Publisher Description
A gripping psychological thriller from the author of the global phenomenon The Girl on the Train
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'Wondering if Into the Water could be as good as The Girl on the Train? It's better. A triumph.' Clare Mackintosh, bestselling author of I Let You Go
'A moody and chilling thriller that will have you madly turning the pages. A gripping, compulsive read!' Shari Lapena, bestselling author of The Couple Next Door
'A brilliantly plotted and fast-paced juggernaut of a read that hurtles to a heart-stopping conclusion.' Good Housekeeping
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Just days before her sister plunged to her death, Jules ignored her call.
Now Nel is dead. They say she jumped. And Jules must return to her sister's house to care for her daughter, and to face the mystery of Nel's death.
But Jules is afraid. Of her long-buried memories, of the old Mill House, of this small town that is drowning in secrecy . . .
And of knowing that Nel would never have jumped.
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Readers are gripped by Into the Water
***** 'So dark, yet stylish and slick. Into the Water gripped me, twisted me and totally consumed me.'
***** 'So many twist and turns . . . keeps you wanting to read more and stay up all night.'
***** 'Filled with suspense and with characters I genuinely cared about, I was hooked by every page.'
APPLE BOOKS REVIEW
After the runaway success of The Girl on the Train, it probably wasn’t easy for Paula Hawkins to release a new book into the world. Thankfully, Into the Water not only delivers another suspenseful and chilling thriller, but reveals even more of Hawkins’ strengths as a storyteller. The novel takes place in Beckford where, throughout history, local women have drowned in the river that snakes through the eerily isolated English town. Almost everyone is guilty of something—figuring out how is chilling entertainment.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Jules Abbott, the heroine of bestseller Hawkins's twisty second psychological thriller, vowed never to return to the sleepy English town of Beckford after an incident when she was a teenager drove a wedge between her and her older sister, Nel. But now Nel, a writer and photographer, is the latest in a long string of women found dead in a part of the local river known as the Drowning Pool. As Nel put it, "Beckford is not a suicide spot. Beckford is a place to get rid of troublesome women." Before Nel's death, the best friend of her surly 15-year-old daughter, Lena, drowned herself, an act that had a profound effect on both Nel and Lena. Beckford history is dripping with women who've thrown themselves or been pushed? off the cliffs into the Drowning Pool, and everyone from the police detective, plagued by his own demons, working the case to the new cop in town with something to prove knows more than they're letting on. Hawkins (The Girl on the Train) may be juggling a few too many story lines for comfort, but the payoff packs a satisfying punch. Author tour.
Customer Reviews
Fine
Nope. Not my style. Too slow, too long before the story gets anywhere. Didn’t finish it.