Available Formats
Where She Went: An utterly gripping psychological thriller with a killer twist
By (Author) B. E. Jones
Little, Brown Book Group
Constable
28th February 2017
United Kingdom
General
Fiction
823.92
Paperback
304
Width 235mm, Height 158mm, Spine 24mm
410g
TV journalist Melanie Black wakes up one morning next to a man she doesn't recognise. It's not the first time - but he ignores her even though she's in his bed. Yet when his wife walks in with a cup of tea he greets her with a smile and to her horror, Melanie comes to realise that no one can see or her hear her - because she is dead.
But has she woken up next to her murderer And where is her body Why is she an invisible and uninvited guest in a house she can't leave; is she tied to this man forever Is Melanie being punished in some way, or being given a chance to make amendsAs she begins to piece together the last days of her life and circumstances leading up to her own death it becomes clear she has to make a choice: bring her killer to justice, or wreak her own punishment out to the man who murdered her.Advance praise for B.E. Jones:'I got completely sucked in by this . . . If Rebecca had written Rebecca what you'd get is The Dead Girl. An irresistible voice, a unique predicament and a cast of characters that plays acid jazz on your heartstrings. Hard to take and impossible to look away' Catriona McPhersonAn enjoyable debut that turns the whodunit genre on its head and catapults B.E. Jones firmly into the 'one to watch' category - Starburst Magazine
I got completely sucked in by this . . . If Rebecca had written Rebecca what you'd get is Where She Went. An irresistible voice, a unique predicament and a cast of characters that plays acid jazz on your heartstrings. Hard to take and impossible to look awayB.E. Jones is a former journalist and police press officer, now a novelist and book obsessive. She was born in a small village in the South Wales valleys, north of Cardiff and started her journalism career with Trinity Mirror newspapers before becoming a broadcast journalist with BBC Wales Today.
She has worked on all aspects of crime reporting (as well as community news and features) producing stories and content for newspapers and live TV. Most recently she worked as a press officer for South Wales Police, dealing with the media and participating in criminal investigations, security operations and emergency planning. Perhaps unsurprisingly she channels these experiences of 'true crime,' and her insight into the murkier side of human nature, into her dark, psychological thrillers set in and around South Wales.