Author:Susan Lewis

Since Susannah Cates's husband was sent to prison three years ago, life has been a constant struggle to provide for herself and their teenage daughter. Nothing ever seems to go right and the most she hopes for now is that nothing more will go wrong.
Worried by her mother's unhappiness, thirteen-year-old Neve decides to take matters into her own hands. And when Susannah's closest friend Patsy discovers what Neve is up to, she lends her support immediately. As their plans start to unfold they have no way of knowing what kind of fates they are stirring, all they can see is Susannah's excitement, because at last a way seems to be opening up for her to escape her bad luck. . .
However, the spectre of horror is all the time pacing behind the scenes and never, in all Susannah's worst nightmares, could she have imagined her happiness causing so much pain to someone she loves.
From the prolific pen of Susan Lewis, Out of the Shadows has all the hallmarks of Cinderella about it...Lewis has a certain knack of frustrating the reader almost to screaming point. For me, this is what succeeded in giving it the dark edge needed for a story that transpired to be anything but a fairytale...An all round four stars
—— New BooksOne of the best around
—— Independent on SundayExpertly written to brew an atmosphere of foreboding ... an irresistible blend of intrigue and passion, and the consequences of secrets and betrayal
—— WomanSpellbinding!
—— Daily MailMystery and romance par excellence
—— The SunYou don't have to have been there; if you're willing, he'll take you there
—— Michael Carlson , SpectatorThe pioneering work in a genre you'd have to call psychedelic Noir ...Who writes sentences as beautiful as Pynchon?
—— Sam Leith , Daily MailPynchon leaves the rest of the American literary establishment at the starting gate...the range over which he moves is extraordinary, not simply in terms of ideas explored but also in the range of emotions he takes you through
—— Time OutThe most important and mysterious writer of his generation
—— TimeA warm and joyous read. There is softness about this book, but also a tinge of melancholy
—— Billy O’Callaghan , Irish Examiner'A scandalously good read'
—— The ScotsmanBrilliant
—— CloserAn enjoyably black and bracingly unsentimental novel
—— The TimesBrilliant black comedy
—— Woman&Home