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186 bytes removed ,  10:14, 3 September 2016
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[[Category:Thrillers|*]]
[[Category:New Reviews|Thrillers]]__NOTOC__<!-- Remove -->
{{newreview
|author= Harlan Coben
|title= Fool Me Once
|rating= 5
|genre= Thrillers
|summary= Joe was buried quickly. Only three days after his murder. For those of us who regularly watch the crime shows or even read the papers that might seem like indecent haste. His widow Maya isn't thinking like that, though. Through the service she's thinking about all sorts of other things. She's bringing her training to bear. Distraction. Get through this bit and then deal with what needs to be done.
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>1784751111</amazonuk>
}}
{{newreview
|author=Michael R Lane
|summary=Meet Pascal Garnier. Normally, in starting a review that way, I'm on about the main character of the book, but it could be said the biggest character of any Pascal Garnier book is Pascal Garnier, not that that's a flaw. Over a half-dozen titles I've come to know the pattern of his output, and it's fair to say this example fits it very well. Again, not a fault. His thrillers have a small cast list of characters, trapped somehow in a small community, cut off by weather, season or remoteness. Here we are with Eliette, and just a handful of others, and watching her as she celebrates the return of spring to her remote home, an ex-silk farm in southern France. All characters have a darkness about them, including Eliette – she had wanted to retire to the place with her loving, long-term husband, but he died of cancer months before retirement. And the final piece of the Garnier pattern is that that darkness, the black surrounding the night stars to use one of the more memorable lines here, is that things – said situation, other people, life itself – cause people to do some equally black and stupid acts…
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>1910477257</amazonuk>
}}
{{newreview
|author= Hilary Spiers
|title= Hester and Harriet
|rating= 4.5
|genre=Thrillers
|summary=Hester and Harriet are two respectable widowed sisters in their sixties, living a life of pleasant routine in their cottage in a quiet village. Known to all their neighbours, they play bridge, do good turns, and in short are everything two ladies of their age and station should be. It's no surprise, then, that their first thought upon seeing a frightened young woman with a baby in a disused bus shelter on Christmas morning is to take her home and feed her. But not everyone in the world, or even in their village, has such good intentions. Life is about to get terribly complicated.
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>1925266818</amazonuk>
}}

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