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The Cove: An absolutely gripping thriller that will have you hooked

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1 pages, Audio CD

Published July 25, 2023

3 people are currently reading
18 people want to read

About the author

Gregg Dunnett

35 books480 followers
Gregg Dunnett is a British author writing psychological thrillers and stories about travel and adventure, usually with a connection to the coast or to the oceans. Before turning to novels he worked as a journalist for ten years on a windsurfing magazine, briefly owned a sailing school in Egypt, taught English in Thailand, Portugal, Turkey and Italy, taught sailing in Greece and Spain, and also had several rather duller jobs along the way.

His brother is the adventurer Jono Dunnett who in 2015 windsurfed alone and unsupported around the entire coastline of Great Britain, and who is currently windsurfing around the coastline of Europe.

Gregg lives in Bournemouth on the south coast of England with his partner Maria. They have two young children, Alba and Rafa, for whom the phrase “Daddy's working” has absolutely no effect.

Gregg's debut novel was an Amazon top 100 best seller in the UK and was downloaded over a quarter of a million times.

Gregg on why he writes:

"I’ve always wanted to do two things in life, to write, and to have adventures. When I was a kid I imagined grand affairs. Kayaking across Canada, cycling to Australia. Whole summers in the Arctic. Did it happen? Well, partly.

I’ve been lucky, I spent some years abroad teaching English. I worked in sailing schools in Greece and Spain. I really lucked out with a job testing windsurfing boards for the magazine I grew up reading. I made a questionable decision (ok, a bad decision) to buy a windsurfing centre in Egypt. I’ve also done my fair share of less exciting jobs. Packing and stacking potatoes on a farm, which got me fitter than I’ve ever been in my life. I did a few years in local government which taught me that people really do have meetings that result only in the need for more meetings, and they really do take all afternoon. I spent a pleasant few months in a giant book warehouse, where I would deliberately get lost among the miles of shelves unpacking travel guides and daydreaming. I’ve done a bit of writing too, at least I learned how to write. Boards Magazine isn’t well known (it doesn’t even exist today) but it did have a reputation for being well written and I shoe-horned articles in my own gonzo journalism style on some topics with the most tenuous of links to windsurfing. But the real adventures never came. Nor did the real writing.

Then, in 2015, my brother announced he was going to become the first person to windsurf alone around Great Britain. I don’t know why. Apparently it was something he’d always wanted to do (news to me). It was a proper adventure. It was dangerous, it was exciting. Even before he set off he was interviewed on TV, in the papers etc... Some people thought he was reckless, some thought he was inspirational. Lots of people thought he’d fail.

But he didn’t. He made it around. He even sailed solo from Wales to Ireland, the first to make the crossing without the aid of a safety boat. I was lucky enough to be involved in a planning level, and take part in a few training sails, and the last leg of the trip. But he did ninety nine percent of it on his own. One step at a time, just getting on with it. That was quite inspiring.

In a way it inspired me to pull my finger out. I’d been writing novels - or trying to write novels - then for a few years. But it was touch and go as to whether I was going to be one of those ‘writers’ with a half-finished novel lost on a hard drive somewhere, rather than someone who might actually manage to finish the job.

I’ve now got two lovely, highly demanding children, so real adventures are hard right now. I still try to get away when I can for nights out in the wilds rough camping, surf trips sleeping in the van, windsurfing when the big storms come. I love adventures with the kids too.

I hope in time to get around to a few real adventures. I want to sail across an ocean. I want to bike across a continent. I definitely want to spend more time surfing empty waves.

But fo

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Displaying 1 - 4 of 4 reviews
Profile Image for Sneha.
145 reviews1 follower
September 12, 2025
#TheCove #GreggDunnett #JanCramer #DreamscapeMedia #StormPublishing #NetGalley #DetectiveEricaSands

Widowed mother Christine Harvey thinks she's found the perfect fresh start for her children when she purchases a stunning clifftop house with breathtaking ocean views. What she doesn't know is that her dream home sits next door to the scene of a child's abduction and murder.

Even though a homeless man who became the prime suspect was confronted and killed, closing the case, Christine's maternal instincts kick into overdrive as she becomes increasingly paranoid about her neighbor and obsessed with uncovering the truth.

Gregg Dunnett masterfully constructs what appears to be a straightforward domestic thriller about a protective mother but delivers something far more complex and unexpected. The neighbor situation serves as an effective red herring while the real story unfolds in plain sight.

Adding intrigue is the fact that one of the lead detectives in the original case is the daughter of a notorious killer serving time in prison.

Dunnett's strength lies in weaving family drama seamlessly with suspense elements, creating a narrative where the actual culprit doesn't even register as a threat during the early chapters.

Jan Cramer's narration captures Christine's growing paranoia as she digs deeper into secrets that should have stayed buried.
The pacing builds steadily toward a revelation that completely blindsides readers, reminiscent of Mary Higgins Clark's ability to hide truth in broad daylight. This is domestic suspense done right, where every assumption gets turned upside down.

This is an Advanced Listening Copy of the audiobook from Net Galley.

This is a review of the audiobook.
Profile Image for CL.
781 reviews26 followers
May 1, 2025
First time reading a book by this author. Started off slow but keep reading it picks up. Det. Erica Sands gets drawn into the murder of a child that results in the death of two of her colleagues and grave injury to herself. While she is recuperating the case is marked solved but is it really . . .
Profile Image for Hensley Michael.
677 reviews1 follower
April 27, 2025
“The Cove” is the first book in DI Erica Sands's three-book series.
I enjoyed this whodunit, but I did guess the ending.
Well done
Major WTF
I look forward to reading “The Trap,” book two in the Erica Sands series.
19 reviews
September 9, 2025
Good, but Erica is hard to like or even empathise with and this is not one of his best
Displaying 1 - 4 of 4 reviews

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