Book description
‘As five we were mighty, the points on a star...Once we five joined, it
was never boys against girls...Two of our triangles cut themselves off
and ran away together, and we were never whole again. Never.’
‘As five we were mighty, the points on a star...Once we five joined, it
was never boys against girls...Two of our triangles cut themselves off
and ran away together, and we were never whole again. Never.’
Years ago, they were the best of friends. But as time passed, they grew
apart, became adults with families of their own, and began to forget
about the past - and the terrible lies they shared.
But now Gordon, the youngest and wildest of the five, has died and the
others are thrown together for the first time in years.
Could their long-ago lie be the reason for their troubles today? Is it
more dangerous to admit to what they’d done or is it the strain of
keeping the secret that is beginning to wear down on their souls.
Dark, provocative and beautifully written, Laura Lippman’s genre defying
novel will appeal to fans of Lionel Shriver, Megan Abbott and Kate
Atkinson. ‘The Innocents is compelling, suspenseful - everything a
great thriller should be - but it is SO much more than that. That rarest
of books - a nuanced and beautifully literate page-turner - this
confirms what many of us have known for some time. Laura Lippman is not
just the author of top-notch psychological thrillers, she is one of the
finest writers in America. Simple as that.’ Mark Billingham
‘A story that ripples with menace, sorrow and the dark churn of
adolescence-the prices families pay for secrets, the things we can’t
look at in ourselves.’ Megan Abbott, bestselling author of The End of Everything
‘Lippman delivers an emotionally complex drama that cements her
reputation as one of the smartest crime writers around.’ People Magazine
Lippman has long excelled at believable psychological suspense.’ The Guardian
‘Succeeds brilliantly...Lippman is in total command of her material...a
mystery so taut the reader is nearly afraid to keep going-and
simultaneously powerless to stop.’ People Magazine
‘Exquisite as fine jewellery.’ Lee Child
‘A corker... engrossing.’ The Observer Laura Lippman was a reporter
for twenty years, including twelve years at the Baltimore Sun. Her
novels have won almost every prize given for crime fiction in the United
States, including the Edgar, Anthony, Nero Wolfe and Agatha awards.