Tuesday's Gone
Nicci French
Tuesday's Gone
Nicci French, the bestselling author of "What to do When Someone Dies and "Losing You", returns with the second book in the gripping new series that began with Top Ten Bestseller "Blue Monday". Fans of Peter James' "Roy Grace" series and Peter Robinson's "DCI Banks" series will love central character psychotherapist Frieda Klein, who is consulted on a grisly and seemingly unsolvable crime. For Frieda Klein the days get longer, the cases darker...Psychotherapist Frieda Klein thought she was done with the police. But once ...
4.0 out of 5 based on 3 reviews
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Omniscore:
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| Classification |
Fiction |
| Genre |
General Fiction, Crime, Thrillers & Mystery |
| Format |
Paperback |
| Pages |
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| RRP |
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| Date of Publication |
July 2012 |
| ISBN |
978-0718156961 |
| Publisher |
Michael Joseph |
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Nicci French, the bestselling author of "What to do When Someone Dies and "Losing You", returns with the second book in the gripping new series that began with Top Ten Bestseller "Blue Monday". Fans of Peter James' "Roy Grace" series and Peter Robinson's "DCI Banks" series will love central character psychotherapist Frieda Klein, who is consulted on a grisly and seemingly unsolvable crime. For Frieda Klein the days get longer, the cases darker...Psychotherapist Frieda Klein thought she was done with the police. But once ...
Reviews
The Independent
Barry Forshaw
“From the rivetingly described opening chapter through the adroitly orchestrated plot, this is vintage French, brimming with all the dark insight that distinguished the earlier books. It appears that the duo has channelled the elements that made them so winning: a sharply observed picture of modern British society, and a sense of personal danger for the protagonists which never relaxes its grip, What's more, we are granted startling revelations about Klein's character. ”
28/07/2012
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The Daily Express
Emma Lee-Potter
“The tale is skilfully plotted with so many strands that you need your wits about you to keep up. It also paints an all too accurate portrait of London, from the shabby back streets strewn with rubbish to the swanky skyscrapers and townhouses of Docklands. Best of all we are getting to know Frieda better as the series progresses. ”
20/07/2012
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The Guardian
John O'Connell
“Klein is engagingly awkward, and her arm's-length involvement with the case allows the authors to dramatise the clashes of protocol that make contemporary crime-solving interesting to us but onerous to those at the sharp end. A vivid, finely crafted performance.”
20/07/2012
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