I Know Who You Are
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- USD 3.99
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- USD 3.99
Descripción editorial
Another gripping thriller from Sunday Times and New York Times bestselling author Alice Feeney!
'One of my favourite thriller writers' Harlan Coben
'I'm a huge Feeney fan' Chris Whitaker
'A phenomenal storyteller' Clare Leslie Hall
'One of the best psychological thriller writers' The Sun
'Feeney is psycho thriller royalty' Daily Mail
‘A fiendishly well-plotted, deliciously dark and twisting read’ Lucy Foley
‘You will NEVER guess the ending of this one!’ Louise Candlish
‘Twisty and gripping’ Jane Fallon
‘A twisty, gripping thriller’ Sunday Times
*****
Aimee Sinclair: the actress everyone thinks they know but can’t remember where from. But I know exactly who you are. I know what you’ve done. And I am watching you.
When Aimee comes home and discovers her husband is missing, she doesn’t seem to know what to do or how to act. The police think she’s hiding something and they’re right, she is – but perhaps not what they thought. Aimee has a secret she’s never shared, and yet, she suspects that someone knows. As she struggles to keep her career and sanity intact, her past comes back to haunt her in ways more dangerous than she could have ever imagined.
I Know Who You Are will leave your heart pounding and your pulse racing. This is the most twisted thriller you’ll read all year.
About the author
ALICE FEENEY is the Sunday Times and New York Times multi-million-copy bestselling author of Beautiful Ugly, Good Bad Girl, Daisy Darker, Rock Paper Scissors, His & Hers, I Know Who You Are and Sometimes I Lie. Her novels have been translated into thirty-nine languages, and have been optioned for major screen adaptations, including His & Hers for Netflix. Alice was a BBC journalist for fifteen years, and now lives in the Devon countryside with her family.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
For most folks, being suspected in the disappearance of their spouse would be about as bad as it gets, but not for London actress Aimee Sinclair, the narrator of bestseller Feeney's shock-filled second thriller (after 2018's Sometimes I Lie). Aimee's past is much darker than the disturbing film with a famous director for which she desperately wants to audition and her future seems to be barreling full tilt toward the stuff of nightmares. For starters, Aimee's husband of two years, journalist Ben Bailey, vanishes from their Notting Hill town house the day after they have a fight and she asks him for a divorce. The balance of their joint bank account also disappears, and there's security footage of a woman who could be her doppelg nger making the withdrawal. Feeney displays her linguistic flair in the chapters devoted to her heroine's harrowing early years, but this affecting backstory seems part of a different, better novel than the present-day story with its cardboard characters on a plot-powered roller coaster. The action speeds toward a finale that's about as subtle as an ax. Fans of over-the-top psychological thrillers will be satisfied.