Keeper
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3.3 • 11 Ratings
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- $11.99
Publisher Description
Whitechapel, 1888: London is bowed under Jack the Ripper's reign of terror.
London 2015: actress Julianne Bell is abducted in a case similar to the terrible Tower Hamlets murders of some ten years earlier, and harking back to the Ripper killings of a century before.
Falkenberg, Sweden, 2015: a woman's body is found mutilated in a forest, her wounds identical to those of the Tower Hamlets victims.
With the man arrested for the Tower Hamlets crimes already locked up, do the new killings mean he has a dangerous accomplice, or is a copy-cat serial killer on the loose?
Profiler Emily Roy and true-crime writer Alexis Castells again find themselves drawn into an intriguing case, with personal links that turn their world upside down.
Following the highly acclaimed Block 46 and guaranteed to disturb and enthral, Keeper is a breathless thriller from the new queen of French Noir.
'A bold and intelligent read' Laura Wilson, Guardian
'A terrific, original duo' Marcel Berlins, Times
'Compelling' Women's Own
'Gustawsson's writing is so vivid, it's electrifying. Utterly compelling' Peter James
'Bold and audacious' R. J. Ellory
'A real page-turner … I loved it' Martina Cole
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
More is decidedly less in Gustawsson's overly busy second pairing of Behavioural Investigative Advisor Emily Roy and author Alexis Castells (after 2017's Block 46). Emily, an expat Canadian who works with the British police, met Alexis during the writer's research for a true crime book. Alexis's romantic partner, a French police officer, was killed by suspect Richard Hemfield a decade earlier, and Hemfield was later convicted of abducting, mutilating, and murdering six women, leaving their corpses near Tower Hamlets in London. But while Hemfield remains incarcerated in Broadmoor psychiatric hospital, the abduction of actress Julianna Bell suggests his innocence, a shocking development that reunites Emily and Alexis. Whoever kidnapped Julianna left a freezer bag behind containing her shoes, just as the Tower Hamlets killer did with his victims. Meanwhile, the mutilation murder of a woman in Sweden matches the Tower Hamlets killer's m.o. Flashbacks make the story line needlessly convoluted and do nothing to make the ultimate reveal more plausible. It's altogether underwhelming.