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'A new young writer I believe in' Jeanette Winterson
'Made me want to shout out in anger' Val McDermid
Coming in Spring 2020, KEEPER is the addictive literary thriller that's already starting conversations, for readers who loved Lullaby and Three Women.
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He's been looking in the windows again. Messing with cameras. Leaving notes.
Supposed to be a refuge. But death got inside.
When Katie Straw's body is pulled from the waters of the local suicide spot, the police decide it's an open-and-shut case. A standard-issue female suicide.
But the residents of Widringham women's refuge where Katie worked don't agree. They say it's murder.
Will you listen to them?
An addictive literary page-turner about a crime as shocking as it is commonplace, Keeper will leave you reeling long after the final page is turned.
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'Reading Keeper is a visceral experience ... cleverly reminding us that for some women simply existing in a man's world is more dangerous than anything else' Araminta Hall, author of Our Kind of Cruelty
'Intense and compassionate . . . it made me furious and sad, but it also made me feel seen' Hanna Jameson, author of The Last
'Pacy, absorbing and electric in its detail...Men should read this book, and I'd be shocked to meet a woman who doesn't find some part of herself here' Beth Underdown, author of The Witchfinder's Sister
'Extraordinary and compelling' Cara Hunter, author of Close to Home
'Sharp, incisive writing, and frighteningly believable characters. And what a twist . . .' Simon Lelic, author of The House
'A timely and thought provoking novel that explores issues of power and control with a sensitive and deft touch' Nuala Ellwood author of Day of the Accident
326 pages, Kindle Edition
First published March 24, 2020
“She learns to name the demon. To understand that, just as cities can fall without a shot being fired, a woman can relinquish herself, piece by piece.”The characterisations are excellent and our emotions are pulled towards and driven away from Katie and Jamie as we would want them to be.


Why, Whitworth wondered with an ancient sort of weariness, can these bloody women not look after themselves?
“We don’t know what she did. For all we know, she spent every day dragging her husband through the dirt while she lived off his money. You saw that house. You saw all the things he gave her. And what did she do in return?”