<b>I’ve loved Sarah’s work from the beginning</b>. She’s <b>a brave writer</b>, shifting tone and subject matter, <b>always surprising</b>. Above all, she’s a<b> master of her craft</b>. In every book<b> she makes the words sing</b>
- Ann Cleeves, author of <i> The Vera Stanhope <i/> series,
<b>Nail-biting, heart-wrenching stuff.</b> <i>Black Thorn </i>has the atmosphere and drama of <b>a modern-day du Maurier</b> novel. Sarah Hilary’s uncanny ability to make readers not just see through her characters’ eyes but feel through their skin in unparalleled
- Erin Kelly, author of <i> The Skeleton Key <i/> on <i>Black Thorn</i>,
A <b>creepy and atmospheric</b> tale, <b>beautifully and sensitively written</b>
- <i>The Guardian</i> on <i>Black Thorn</i>,
<b>A mesmerizing stor</b>y of family and community, secrets and lies. <b>Psychologically rich and captivatingly told</b>, Sarah Hilary’s <i>Black Thorn</i> sweeps you into its dark embrace from the start and holds you there until its final revelations
- Megan Abbott, author of <i> Dare Me <i/> on <i>Black Thorn</i>,
<b>Exudes a tightly controlled menace </b>that ratchets up to full-blown claustrophobia as the pages turn. A book that oozes under your skin from the opening sentence
- Vaseem Khan, author of <i> Death of a Lesser God <i/> on <i>Black Thorn</i>,
Sarah Hilary has done it again with this<b> tale of toxicity</b> in all its forms. <b>Excellent</b> <b>writing</b> <b>and tight plotting</b> on top of shifting sands make <i>Black Thorn</i> an <b>unforgettable read </b>with the most sympathetic protagonist I've read in years
- Liz Nugent, author of <i> Strange Sally Diamond <i/> on <i>Black Thorn</i>,
<b>Brilliant</b>. Taking a really deep dive into some dark spaces that Sarah brings vividly to life, <b>it's wonderful and unlike anything else I've read lately</b>
- Mick Herron, author of <i> Slow Horses <i/> on <i>Black Thorn</i>,
<b>Sarah Hilary is a writer with all the gifts</b>: character and psychology, language and<b> one-more-chapter suspense.</b> In twisting, turning, ever-changing <i>Black Thorn</i>, she shows us how very easily the wrong people can turn paradise into hell on earth
- Lucie Whitehouse, author of <i> Risk of Harm <i/> on <i>Black Thorn</i>,
<b>An *extraordinary* book</b>. <b>Beautifully written, densely plotted</b>, with an uncanny insight into the best and worst of family relationships
- Emma Flint, author of <i> Other Women <i/> on <i>Black Thorn</i>,
Brilliant psychological thriller which keeps turning like an egg timer so that you can't work out who is the captor and who is the captive. A remarkably accurate depiction of the impact of trauma, with unforgettable characters.
- Jo Callaghan, author of <i> In the Blink of an Eye <i/>,
Sarah Hilary, Theakston's Old Peculier Crime Novel of the Year winner and author of Black Thorn, returns with Sharp Glass. Trapped and alone in a remote house in the country, one woman must find a way to defeat a captor who has no intention of letting her go.
'A master of her craft. In every book she makes the words sing' – Ann Cleeves
The last thing she remembers is standing outside the empty house. One she was employed to pack, ready for removal. Her job is her life. It is her compulsion to take care of an owner’s precious possessions, to do whatever it takes to help them move on. Now she is cold, dirty, damp, trapped in its cellar with no chance of escape, miles from anywhere. His prisoner.
And then he returns.
Her captor believes she holds the answers to why a young girl was murdered a year ago. He refuses to let her go until she reveals her secrets. But he doesn’t know she has hidden depths, and an anger she works hard to control.
The battle lines are drawn. They are the only two people who can solve the mystery of the dead girl. But when the truth is revealed, whose life will shatter?
* * *
Praise for Sarah Hilary:
'Nail-biting, heart-wrenching stuff' – Erin Kelly, author of The Skeleton Key
'A mesmerizing story of family and community, secrets and lies. Psychologically rich and captivatingly told' – Megan Abbott, author of You Will Know Me
''It's strange and compelling, and no one else could have written it' - Mick Herron, author of Slow Horses