Available Formats
Paperback
Published: 13th May 2025
Paperback
Published: 13th February 2024
Hardback
Published: 28th May 2024
Hardback, Large Print Edition
Published: 7th February 2024
Everyone Who Can Forgive Me is Dead
By (Author) Jenny Hollander
Read by Marisa Calin
Little, Brown Book Group
Constable
13th February 2024
United Kingdom
General
Fiction
823.92
Paperback
336
Width 152mm, Height 232mm, Spine 30mm
420g
Nine years ago, with the world's eyes on her, Charlie Colbert fled. The press and the police called Charlie a 'witness' to the shocking events at her elite graduate school on Christmas Eve - events known to the public as 'Scarlet Christmas' - though Charlie knows she was much more than that.
Now, Charlie has meticulously rebuilt her life: she's the editor-in-chief of a major magazine, engaged to the golden child of the publishing industry and focused on never letting her guard down again. But when a film adaptation made by one of Charlie's former classmates threatens to shatter everything she's worked for, Charlie realises how much she's changed in nine years. Now, she's not going to let anything - not even the people she once loved most - get in her way.Totally gripping . . . grabbed me from the start, and didn't let go until I had finished the last page. Each characters is unique and so clear that, by the end of the book, I felt as if knew them all, and that I had been there with them throughout the story -- Rachel Abbott, author of DON'T LOOK AWAY
Jenny Hollander has written an intoxicatingly sharp thriller. Everyone Who Can Forgive Me Is Dead deftly explores trauma and the dark things we believe ourselves capable of. I never wanted to stop reading it, and I can't wait for Hollander's next novel -- Clmence Michallon, internationally bestselling author of THE QUIET TENANT
Relentlessly twisty and bitingly sharp, Everyone Who Can Forgive Me Is Dead is guaranteed to keep you up past your bedtime. With an undercurrent of smart, dark humor, a chilling mystery at its core, and long-buried secrets resurfacing, this electrifying debut will grip readers and not let go. Voicey, unpredictable, and wholly addictive -- Laurie Elizabeth Flynn, author of THE GIRLS ARE ALL SO NICE HERE
Witty, tightly plotted, knife-sharp, and utterly immersive . . . had me flaking on plans to squeeze in one more chapter. Fans of Jessica Knoll and Megan Miranda, meet your new favorite author -- Andrea Bartz, author of Reese's Book Club pick WE WERE NEVER HERE
Exactly the kind of thriller I love. It's a deliciously conflicting feeling to wonder when the shiny perfection of a new life built over a terrible secret will begin to tarnish, and in her first novel, Hollander doles out the suspense as masterfully as any veteran author . . . A dark and dazzling debut -- Jennifer Hillier, author of THINGS WE DO IN THE DARK
Fans of Jessica Knoll's Luckiest Girl Alive will love this tautly-constructed thriller . . . Hollander paints an engrossing tale of a woman coming to terms not only with the ghosts of her past but her own true nature. A nail-biting ride that will keep readers turning pages long into the night -- Ashley Winstead, author of THE LAST HOUSEWIFE
A propulsive read, rife with tension from page one . . . this is a book I struggled to put down -- Katherine St. John, author of THE LION'S DEN
From the crisp prose to the cunning twists I did not see coming, I absolutely inhaled this clever, touching, feverishly compulsive thriller . . . should be at the top of every thriller lover's TBR list. I cannot wait to watch this brilliant debut soar -- Ashley Tate, author of TWENTY-SEVEN MINUTES
Jenny Hollander is a writer and editor from London. A graduate of Leeds University and the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism, her work has been published in ELLE, Cosmopolitan, Bustle, Marie Claire, Harper's Bazaar, and more. She spent ten years in New York, where she worked as a senior editor for Bustle and the deputy editor at Marie Claire. Now the digital director for Marie Claire, she lives in London with her husband and their rescue dog, Captain. She's a fierce advocate for dyspraxia, which she was diagnosed with when she was nine.