A dark and emotional novel about the fine line between friendship and betrayal, from the number one bestseller.
Fiona Neill is an author and journalist who has written five Sunday Times bestsellers. Her last novel, The Betrayals, sold over 130,000 copies and was a Richard & Judy Book Club selection. Fiona worked as a foreign correspondent in Central America for six years and returned to the UK as assistant editor on Marie Claire before joining The Times Magazine as assistant editor. She has written features for many publications including The Times, Sunday Times Style, and the Telegraph Magazine as well as having written a screenplay of her first novel for the BFI. Fiona grew up in rural North Norfolk and lives in London with her husband and three children.
Sometimes there are four sides to a story - but which one will you
believe in the engrossing RICHARD & JUDY BOOK CLUB PICK, The
Betrayals
*from the publisher's description*
A rollicking read that should not be picked up at bedtime, or
you'll be done for in terms of a good night's sleep. Neill is
brilliant at capturing the wrong turns people make and the
consequences that follow
*Stylist*
Exquisitely drawn and perfectly realised, no one writes about
modern family with more truth and authenticity than Fiona Neill.
She nails it every single time
*Sunday Times bestselling author of I Found You*
A vivid and insightful portrayal of a family in crisis; Neill's
writing is incisive, smart and at times darkly funny. A writer at
the top of her game; I will be telling everybody I know about this
book
*Sunday Times bestselling author of Everything but the Truth*
Telling the story of four intriguing family members in the years
following an affair and a break-up, the cleverly structured plot
revolves around psychology: particularly how people perceive and
recall the same events differently. The Betrayals is
thought-provoking and stands out from the crowd
*Grazia*
Neill's plotting is beyond compare . . . Weaving an utterly
absorbing account of deception and desire, Neill leaves you asking
the question: Which voice can you trust?
*author of The Fifth Letter*
I thoroughly enjoyed this brilliantly observed novel about a family
in meltdown. I have never read anything by Fiona Neill before, but
after reading this totally absorbing tale, that is a situation I
intend to rectify
*Number One Kindle bestselling author of The Letter*
Praise for The Good Girl
*-*
Tapping into the issues of the day . . . this is a novel made for
heated book club debates
*Stylist*
Sometimes touching, sometimes shocking... this cautionary
coming-of-age tale is a thought-provoking one
*Daily Mail*
The Good Girl is vivid and insightful, and Neill has a trained eye
for the pressures and poignancies of modern family life
*Guardian*
Neill writes with verve, honesty and breathtaking insight. Utterly
unputdownable
*author of The Lemon Grove*
The Good Girl raises all kinds of contemporary issues with wit and
sensitivity
*Times*
Clever, grown-up and totally gripping
*Lisa Jewell*
A topical, tense and addictive read
*Good Housekeeping*
The Good Girl looks set to be the next Gone Girl, with its dark
compelling exploration of family secrets . . .
*Seven Books to Read, House Seven*
Neill takes a light scalpel to online disaster in this exceptional
dual-narrative
*Grazia*
Cracking
*Prima*
Two families become embroiled in each other's lives and long buried
secrets are unravelled. Contemporary issues are tackled here with
both humour and realism, making for an engrossing read
*My Weekly*
Neill's characters are so cleverly depicted, you feel as if you've
met at least one of them before
*Vogue*
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