Читать книгу The Most Difficult Thing - Charlotte Philby - Страница 4
Praise for Part of the Family
Оглавление‘Everyone has an agenda in this intriguing exploration of deceit and duplicity, as Philby ratchets up the paranoia to Highsmithian level’
GUARDIAN
‘An enigmatic and slippery beast, a cool new generation of spy novel. Just as the characters play cat and mouse with one another, so does the author with her readers – it’s a guessing game right to the end and I turned the last page with my heart pounding. Recommended’
LOUISE CANDLISH
‘A compelling and emotionally resonant mixture of spy thriller and domestic suspense’
DAILY TELEGRAPH
‘I devoured this beautifully written, intricately wrought and unique blend of spy thriller and domestic suspense. The twists keep coming, right down to that chilling last line’
ERIN KELLY
‘Like The Night Manager rewritten by Patricia Highsmith, this is a distinctively female take on spying’
MAIL ON SUNDAY
‘Dark and addictive and magnificent’
JOANNA CANNON
‘A genre-busting spy novel that amps up the tension and will leave you trusting no one’
RED
‘Spying has been her inheritance and this brilliant, beautifully crafted debut novel uses it to the full – and so much more besides’
JON SNOW, Channel 4 News
‘A writer of promise’
FINANCIAL TIMES
‘Compelling and complex – a compulsive read’
HARRIET TYCE, author of Blood Orange
‘An espionage/domestic noir crossover in which betrayal is as inevitable as it is compulsive’
i PAPER
‘Compulsive and chilling’
GOOD HOUSEKEEPING
‘A page-turning thriller’
BBC RADIO 4 OPEN BOOK
‘Philby clearly understands something about deceit and betrayal, making this a page-turner with several cliffhanger moments, including the ending’
DAILY EXPRESS
‘Intricate, enigmatic, and compelling … Philby is perfectly placed to blend spy thriller with domestic tension’
PRESS ASSOCIATION
‘[A] page-turner full of intrigue and deception … a compulsive read’
PRIMA
‘Fantastic … [a] slick spy thriller’
WOMAN’S WEEKLY
‘A carefully constructed study of duplicity in which the uneasy mood of moral compromise and betrayal never abates’
THE HERALD
‘Absolutely riveting … It will keep your heart pounding to the very last page’
MEATH CHRONICLE