Available Formats
The Split: The most gripping, twisty thriller of the year (A Richard & Judy Book Club pick)
By (Author) Sharon Bolton
Orion Publishing Co
Trapeze
27th October 2020
22nd October 2020
United Kingdom
General
Fiction
Horror and supernatural fiction
Thriller / suspense fiction
823.92
Paperback
400
Width 128mm, Height 196mm, Spine 36mm
279g
THE CHILLING AND GRIPPING RICHARD AND JUDY BOOK CLUB PICK
SHE'LL NEVER STOP RUNNING. BUT HE'LL NEVER STOP LOOKING.A year ago Felicity Lloyd fled England to South Georgia, one of the most remote islands in the world, escaping her past and the man she once loved. Can she keep running her whole lifeFreddie Lloyd has served time for murder - and now he wants her back. Wherever she is, he won't stop until he finds her. Will he be able to track her to the ends of the earthTOGETHER THEY'LL FIND THEMSELVES TRAPPED ON THE ICE AND IN DANGER. WHO WILL SURVIVE* * * * *'A deadly game of cat-and-mouse at the edge of the world.' Erin Kelly'Powerfully atmospheric, unguessably twisty.' Elly Griffiths'I'm a huge Sharon Bolton fan, and this is her best yet.' Lee Child'THE SPLIT grips like permafrost.' JP Delaney'Filled with intrigue and suspense. The Craftsman is spellbinding.' - Clare Mackintosh on The Craftsman
An absolutely terrific crime novel that takes your darkest fear and makes it reality. - Elly GriffithsSharon Bolton at her absolute finest. Beautifully dark and disturbing. - Jenny Blackhurst'Darkly gothic and brilliantly original, The Craftsman will have you spellbound.' - J.P. DelaneySharon (formerly S J) Bolton grew up in a cotton-mill town in Lancashire and had an eclectic early career in marketing and public relations. She gave it up in 2000 to become a mother and a writer.
Her first novel, Sacrifice, was voted Best New Read by Amazon.uk, whilst her second, Awakening, won the 2010 Mary Higgins Clark Award (part of the prestigious Edgars) in the US. She has been shortlisted for the CWA Gold Dagger, the Theakston's Prize for Best Thriller, the International Thriller Writers' Best First Novel award, the Prix Du Polar in France and the Martin Beck award in Sweden.