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Dance With Me: Brilliant psychological suspense from the author of Apple Tree Yard
Unavailable
Dance With Me: Brilliant psychological suspense from the author of Apple Tree Yard
Unavailable
Dance With Me: Brilliant psychological suspense from the author of Apple Tree Yard
Ebook229 pages3 hours

Dance With Me: Brilliant psychological suspense from the author of Apple Tree Yard

Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars

3.5/5

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About this ebook

A man dies a week after re-writing his will. In it, he has left everything he owns to a woman he has known for only three weeks. As Bet investigates Peter's past, she discovers that her ex-lover was not all that he seemed…

In a crumbling office block, another woman has a different sort of ghost to confront. Iris runs her own business but strange things keep happening. Her phone rings and there's no one there. Somebody taps at her door. In the basement, something unpleasant is lurking...
LanguageEnglish
Release dateFeb 27, 2014
ISBN9781471136252
Unavailable
Dance With Me: Brilliant psychological suspense from the author of Apple Tree Yard
Author

Louise Doughty

Louise Doughty’s novel Whatever You Love was short-listed for the Costa Book Award and long-listed for the Orange Prize for Fiction. She is the author of several other novels and a book of nonfiction, A Novel in a Year, based on her hugely popular newspaper column. She also writes plays and journalism and broadcasts regularly for BBC Radio 4. Doughty lives in London.

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Reviews for Dance With Me

Rating: 3.388888888888889 out of 5 stars
3.5/5

9 ratings1 review

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  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    The plot of this book teases and baffles the reader – and impressive though it was, I always have a feeling that such plots come at a price – the let-down when the ending proves mundane or unsatisfactory, or God forbid, someone wakes up and finds it was all a dream. Looking back, I think the author just about gets away with the explanation: it made sense once I had got it straight in my head. And yet it still reminds me of a bubblegum bubble – blown unfeasibly large until you’re dazzled by it, then without warning it pops and ends up all over your face.Leaving all that (and a slightly odd final chapter) to one side, this really is a good read. It’s intelligent, written with bold inventiveness – the Tory MP tied to a chimney can vouch for that – and whatever you think of the ending, I believe it was worth the journey.