AUDIOBOOK

A Question of Identity

Susan HillSeries: Simon Serrailler
4.2
(41)
Duration
10h 28m
Year
2014
Language
English

About

Susan Hill-the Man Booker Prize nominee and winner of the Whitbread, Somerset Maugham, and John Llewellyn Rhys awards-returns with a gripping mystery "eagerly awaited by all aficionados" (P. D. James).The particularly unpleasant murder of a very old woman in a housing project rocks the town of Lafferton. The murderer has left a distinctive "sign" on the body and at the scene of the crime. A couple of weeks later, a similar murder occurs, and a month or so later, so does another.Initial investigations reveal that the mysterious "sign" was the calling card of a suspect who was charged with several murders in the northwest of the country, tried but acquitted on the grounds of insufficient evidence. All indications suggest that this person has simply vanished-or is he right under their noses? Simon Serrailler is obliged to delve deeper and scratch out answers in this addictive mystery of surpassing darkness by the bestselling Susan Hill.

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Reviews

"The title of this, the seventh in the Simon Serrailler mysteries, gives a hint at the complexities of identity. In the novel, identity is something police and prosecutors must establish to link person and scene of the crime…The novel is spiked with the killers musings, which heighten tension and illuminate a very dark space. Very spooky, tick-tock suspense."
Booklist
"Like all the best crime writers Hill is far more interested in writing than she is in crime. What fascination she has for crooks and crackpots is no more (and no less) than the novelists fascination for character…But what you know about human nature is simultaneously being enlarged and improved upon thanks to Hills almost Shakespearean insights into what it is to be alive."
Daily Express (London)
"As every Trollope reader knows, English cathedral towns can be hotbeds of viciousness and vice. And so it is in Lafferton, where Susan Hill sets her thoughtful mysteries."
New York Times Book Review

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