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Wednesday, 6 July 2022

A Slow Fire Burning by Paula Hawkins #Giveaway #ASlowFireBurning @TransworldBooks #Competition #Prize #Win

 


IT'S THE QUIET ONES YOU HAVE TO WATCH

Three women, connected by one brutal crime.

Three women, determined to right the wrongs done to them.

Three women, with everything to hide.

When it comes to revenge, even good people are capable of terrible things.

But only one person killed Daniel Sutherland.

How long can their secrets smoulder, before they explode into flame?

The new SCORCHING bestseller from #1 author of THE GIRL ON THE TRAIN and INTO THE WATER



The paperback edition of A Slow Fire Burning by Paula Hawkins is published on 7 July 2022 by Penguin.

I read and reviewed this when it was published in hardback, and loved it. I think it is her best book to date. 




My Review of A Slow Fire Burning

I read this one in one huge gulp, quite a few months ago and loved every single complex character. I recently re-read it in order to prepare my review and the second read was just as satisfying as the first, I discovered little nuances that I missed at the first read. 

It's a crime novel, there's a murder at the heart of it, but as in her previous novels, Paula Hawkin has created such an intense character-led story, populated with (mainly) women who are often obnoxious, very very troubled and an utter delight to discover.

The body of Daniel Sutherland is discovered on a canal-boat on London's Regent Canal. The discovery is made by Miriam; a middle-aged woman who also lives on the canal. Miriam can be a devious woman, she's something of a busy-body. She keeps a record of local goings-on in a little black book, she also has a box of trinkets; items that she has collected, things that didn't belong to her, but have great importance to various events in her life. Miriam holds grudges, she's ill tempered and angry and she is determined that Daniel's murder could bring a satisfying closure to a long-held grudge that she's held against his uncle; well-known local author Theo Myserson. 

'Mad Laura' is another well-known figure locally. A woman who is damaged, both physically and mentally and who is no stranger to trouble. It just so happens that Laura spent the night with Daniel, and she has the bloody scars to prove it. 

This is a novel that challenges the reader; both in structure and in the number of characters involved in the story. I personally love a challenge, and each character is so well developed in their own right, and linked to one another so well that it was really no hardship at all to get engrossed in this tale. 

It is the female characters who steal the show, as well as Laura and Miriam,  there's Daniel's Aunt Carla; a woman who has spent the last fifteen years struggling with loss. We have Irene, an elderly woman who lives in the house next door to the now deceased Angela; Daniels' drunken mother. Irene is a woman who people dismiss; she's old and inconsequential, but her wisdom and perception steals the story on many occasions. 

This is a powerful, gripping novel that deals with the effects of grief and betrayal. The long-term effects of tragic incidents in the past shape the future of the characters and lead the story. The death of a small child, the abduction and murder of a young girl and  hit-and-run accident that sent shockwaves through a family are all welded together to form the basis, and the motives for the current crime. 

This is masterful writing, narrated by characters who cannot be trusted, and who don't even trust themselves.  If you love an unreliable narrator, you are in for a treat, because we have five of them here!

This is a dark novel, but there are flashes of very welcome humour, especially from Laura, who I have to admit is my favourite character; and, I suspect the favourite of the author too. 

Well worth the wait, A Slow Fire Burning is a devilishly clever story, skilfully and thoughtfully written that kept me guessing to the end. Highly recommended. 





I'm delighted to have one paperback copy to giveaway today. Entry is simple, just fill out the competition widget in the blog post. UK entries only please. 

GOOD LUCK!


One paperback copy of A Slow Fire Burning by Paula Hawkins






'An addictive whodunnit'
Evening Standard

'Here are characters who are real and likeable, even when they are complicated and flawed. Paula Hawkins is a genius'
Lisa Jewell

From the first sentence to the last, this explosivestartling novel grabs you by the throat and doesn't let go. Fiendishly clever'
Kate Mosse

'Shocking, moving, 
full of heart'
Observer

'Twists and turns like a great thriller should, but it's also 
deep, intelligent and intensely human'
Lee Child

'This 
twisted story with its cast of damaged characters builds to a brilliant conclusion.'
Shari Lapena

'
Gripping and intriguing, I loved every moment'
S J Watson

'Superbly told... 
utterly compelling'
Daily Mail

'Paula Hawkins' 
best novel yet'
Harriet Tyce



PAULA HAWKINS worked as a journalist for fifteen years before turning her hand to fiction. 

and brought up in Zimbabwe, Paula moved to London in 1989 and has lived there ever since. Her first thriller, The Girl on the Train, has been a global phenomenon, selling 23 million copies worldwide. Published in over forty languages, it has been a No.1 bestseller around the world and was a No.1 box office hit film starring Emily Blunt.
Into the Water, her second stand-alone thriller, has also been a global No.1 bestseller, spending twenty weeks in the Sunday Times hardback fiction Top 10 bestseller list, and six weeks at No.1.







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