EXCERPT: I'd counted on being home and in bed by ten-thirty, but Karen's wine buzz was fading fast and she had a little weep in the car. I couldn't just leave her at the door. So I ended up staying for a coffee while she slipped off her heels and she told me why I was a fool not to do online dating.
She'd hit the jackpot on week one, apparently. 'We danced on the beach,' she said with a watery smile. 'A bit of a cliche, I know, but nothing beats kissing for the first time under the stars, does it?'
I nodded. 'Nothing wrong with a good snog,' I muttered, wondering if I would ever have one again. I looked at my watch - I needed to leave. I'd have to pay an extra hour to the babysitter as it was. But Karen was in full flow.
'He was wonderful. A little older than me, separated and ready to try again. Mina thought it was all going a bit fast - she didn't want me to get hurt. But I really thought this was it. God, I even started reading articles about fertility in your forties.' And she fell silent.
'What happened?' I prompted gently.
'His wife,' she murmured. 'She came back. And he said he had to give it another chance. Just my luck, really. Still, I haven't given up. There is someone out there for me. Whenever I feel a bit down, I go online and read all the amazing love stories that have resulted from people meeting on apps and look at photos of their beautiful weddings. It'll be my turn one day. And I've met some nice men along the way.'
'And some horrors, I bet?' I tried to lighten the mood.
She laughed and moved on to the man in the world's worst toupee - 'Why do they even make them in ginger?' - and the one who'd brought his mum on the date. 'He said she didn't get out much. She drank us under the table and went home with a darts player.'
ABOUT 'TALKING TO STRANGERS': Three women. One Killer.
Talking to strangers has never been more dangerous...
When the body of forty-four-year-old Karen Simmons is found abandoned in remote woodland, journalist Kiki Nunn is determined this will be the big break she so desperately needs.
Because she has a head start on all the other reporters. Just a week before Karen was killed, Kiki interviewed her about the highs and lows of mid-life romance. Karen told her all about kissing strangers on the beach under the stars, expensive meals, roses. About the scammers, the creeps, the man who followed her home the other night...
While the police appear to be focusing on local suspects, Kiki sets out to write the definitive piece on one woman's fatal search for love. But she will soon learn that the search for truth can be just as deadly...
MY THOUGHTS: Fiona Barton's experience on reporting high profile criminal cases and her fascination with watching those involved, observing their body language and verbal tics, shines through in her latest novel, Talking to Strangers.
Her characters are crafted with care; we all know a Karen, an Annie, a Henry, but it is Gav who broke my heart in this story, and I closed the cover for the final time wondering what would become of him.
Talking to Strangers is not a thriller. It's not fast-paced and full of action. It is more a character study of the people involved. One household has so many secrets, and I quote - it's like a network of tunnels too close to the surface. Making the crust shiver with tension. People living with the ever-present risk of the whole thing collapsing in on itself. And burying them.
Barton shows how easy it is to assume, because someone is a little different, guilt - and the devastating consequences that assumption can have.
The story is narrated from three points of view: Detective Elise King, recently returned to work following her cancer treatment; journalist Kiki Nunn, looking to claw back her lost reputation; and Annie, mother of three. The chapters are short and punchy, easily read. But Barton had my head spinning with theories, possibilities. I was nearly right - but that's like nearly winning the lottery.
The final plot twist is a real sucker punch. My jaw hit the floor and bounced a few times before returning, rather bruised, to its correct place. This is something Fiona Barton is rather good at and why I always look forward to reading her books.
Although this is the second in the Elise King series, each book contains a complete mystery and is easily read as a stand-alone.
⭐⭐⭐⭐.5
#TalkingtoStrangers #NetGalley
THE AUTHOR: What spurred me on to write were the voices and images, collected over a thirty-year career in news journalism, still clamouring to be put on the page – and the irresistible lure of a secret.
Irresistible because secrets expose the suspicion and fear we have about how little we really know other people.
We may pretend otherwise, but we all have hidden thoughts we don’t want anyone to know, things we’ve done that would change the way people feel about us or parts of our lives that we would rather forget.
And for most of us, our fabrications or omissions are so inconsequential that being found out would be mildly embarrassing at worst. But for some of us, our secret threatens to destroy everything.
DISCLOSURE: Thank you to Random House Uk, Transworld, Bantam via NetGalley for providing a digital ARC of Talking to Strangers by Fiona Barton for review. All opinions expressed in this review are entirely my own personal opinions.