Let me lie by Clare Mackintosh



BLURB FROM AMAZON
Anna says it was murder. 
Who do you believe?
‘Another one-more-chapter, stay-up-late sensation’ Lee Child
‘A work of genius’ Joanna Cannon
‘No one writes a twist like Clare Mackintosh’ Paula Hawkins
One year ago, Caroline Johnson chose to end her life brutally: a shocking suicide planned to match that of her husband just months before. Their daughter, Anna, has struggled to come to terms with their loss ever since.
Now with a young baby of her own, Anna misses her mother more than ever and starts to ask questions about her parents’ deaths. But by digging up the past, is she putting her future in danger?
Sometimes it’s safer to let things lie . . .
I love Clare’s books the way they are written and how they grab you from the very first page all the way to the last and leaving you wanting more all the time. I always have a book hang over after Clare’s books and it takes me a while to get into another book because I’m always oping that the next book is as good as Clare’s books. i have never been disappointed.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR 
Clare Mackintosh spent twelve years in the police force, including time on CID, and as a public order commander. She left the police in 2011 to work as a freelance journalist and social media consultant and is the founder of the Chipping Norton Literary Festival. She now writes full time and lives in North Wales with her husband and their three children.
Clare’s debut novel, I Let You Go, was a Sunday Times bestseller and the fastest-selling title by a new crime writer in 2015. It was selected for both the Richard and Judy Book Club (and was the winning title of the readers’ vote for the summer 2015 selection) and for ITV’s Loose Women’s Loose Books. It is a New York Times bestseller, with translation rights sold to more than 30 countries.
Her second psychological thriller, I See You, was a number 1 Sunday Times bestseller and Audibles best selling psychological thriller in 2016. Translation rights have been sold to almost 30 countries.
Clare is the patron of the Silver Star Society, an Oxford-based charity which supports the work carried out in the John Radcliffe Hospital’s Silver Star unit, providing special care for mothers with medical complications during pregnancy.
What would you do if you had a card posted through the door telling you that your parents suicide wasn’t an accident. Would you do everything in your power to find out the truth but was scared to find the truth out and really wished that your life had turned out differently and that your parents was still alive. That i what Anna has been wishing for all the way through her pregnancy all she wanted was her mother around to tell her what to expect and be he support she wanted. Never did she believe what happened next and how her parents life was really like and what really happened. Would Anna be able to carry on facing the truth and would she ever have her happy ever after. I wont say any more on this book as i really don’t want to give to much away but this was a 5 star book for me. 

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