Description |
374 pages ; 24 cm |
Summary |
A disaffected bookseller develops a dangerous obsession in this dark and twisty debut. Roach would rather be listening to the latest episode of her favourite true crime podcast than assisting the boring and predictable customers at her local branch of the bookstore Spines, where she's worked her entire adult life. A serious true crime junkie, Roach looks down her nose at the pumpkin-spice-latte-drinking casual fans who only became interested in the genre once it got trendy. But when Laura, a pretty and charismatic children's bookseller, arrives to help rejuvenate the struggling bookstore branch, Roach recognises in her an unexpected kindred spirit. Despite their common interest in true crime, Laura keeps her distance from Roach, resisting the other woman's overtures of friendship. Undeterred, Roach learns everything she can about her new colleague, eventually uncovering Laura's traumatic family history. When Roach realises that she may have come across her very own true crime story, interest swiftly blooms into a dangerous obsession. A darkly funny suspense novel, Death of a Bookseller raises ethical questions about the fervour for true crime and how we handle stories that don't belong to us |
Subject |
Secrecy -- Fiction
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Bookstores -- Employees -- Fiction
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True crime stories -- Fiction
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Stalkers -- Fiction
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Booksellers and bookselling -- Fiction
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Stalking -- Fiction
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Genre/Form |
Thrillers (Fiction)
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Psychological fiction
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Psychological fiction.
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Thrillers (Fiction).
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Reading nook.
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LC no. |
jb2023018280 |
ISBN |
9781529385335 (paperback) |
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