Author:Amy Meredith

Deepdene has been swept by what seems to be a vicious tropical disease. Luckily Eve and Jess are both healthy so they're taking their chance to enjoy the unseasonal heat wave. But then teenagers start to disappear. The spread of the disease worsens and the town is placed under lockdown. A demon is among them. It could be anybody. And now there's nowhere to go...
The third title in this successful series. For all fans of Buffy the Vampire Slayer, Charmed and Twilight.
A great read for teenagers
—— Portunus Club MagazineA convincing portrait of how childhood brutality is passed down the generations...Direct in its depiction of abuse, Forgetting Zoë is never less than psychologically acute.
—— Financial TimesStockholm syndrome is a curious but understandable condition, intelligently and vividly explored by Ray Robinson...Ray Robinson is a writer with keen observation. His prose is hard, abrupt and sinewy...It is a novel that contains violence but also stillness, that reveals more than it makes explicit...A mature and accomplished work.
Very provocative...Powerfully done.
—— Tom Sutcliffe , Saturday Review, Radio 4Terribly convincing...The ventriloquism is very skilled.
—— Kevin Jackson , Saturday Review, Radio 4The language is fantastic.
—— Tom Dyckhoff , Saturday Review, Radio 4Has a thriller-like pace.
—— Linda Grant , Saturday Review, Radio 4Gloriously witty, and written with a sharp-eyed intelligence, The Second Wives Club is Jane Moore at her very best
—— Yorkshire Evening PostBrilliant ... In a hilarious portrayal of the ups and downs of being wife No.2, The Second Wives Club puts paid to the stereotype of the wicked stepmother once and for all
—— SunThis is the perfect holiday read but would be just as entertainiing on the commute to work as accompanying you pool side
—— handbag.comSecond wives form a club to bitch about their husbands and in-laws in this compelling read
—— heatA really enjoyable, if rather sad, read, full of historical and human interest
—— Irish Sunday IndependentFelix Quinn, the narrator of the book...explains it beautifully - and this is a very good novel... Feeling unsafe makes him feel alive. And loss, of course, is the wellspring of good storytelling
—— Evening StandardThe Act of Love is an ambitious and at times extremely uncomfortable novel
—— The TelegraphIt is an almost frighteningly brilliant achievement. Why did the Booker judges not recognise it?
—— The GuardianThis is a very good novel
—— ScotsmanJacobson's 10th novel is a moving, thought-provoking and darkly witty story of desire and love
—— Irish Times






