Author:Rupert James

Hell hath no fury like a stepsister scorned...
Elizabeth Miller has brains, a trust fund and an unreliable fiancé. Rachel Hope is a young aspiring actress: beautiful, talented, seemingly sweet. Under normal circumstances they would never have even met, but their parents' marriage makes them reluctant siblings. But the girls are about to discover they have another thing in common - they share the same taste in men...
After a devastating betrayal rips their new family apart, the two women are no longer sisters, no longer even speaking. Now Rachel is on the verge of the fame she's always craved.Elizabeth has become a gossip columnist, one who knows far too many secrets about Rachel's past. And she's hell-bent on getting her revenge...
Glitzy, bitchy and raunchy, this gripping novel is just fabulous.'
—— CloserBitchy and backstabbing and a really juicy read.
—— Star MagazineSTEPSISTERS is a light, racy read that's ideal for packing in your holiday suitcase.
—— Candisa sexy and scandalous treat ****
—— Heat MagazineIt's sassy, it's smart... Go girl!
—— Jeanette WintersonAn extraordinary, irreducible fantasy
—— ObserverBurgess's ambitious study of 20th-century history centers on the stormy relationship between an effete, popular novelist and a Faustian priest
—— Publishers WeeklyIt is glitzy, glamorous, page-turning stuff with bite
—— Sarah BroadhurstChilling...will keep you guessing until the end
—— PsychologiesChilling psychological thriller... Fact and fiction are cleverly blurred, and the intricately plotted spins and turns will keep you guessing till the end
—— GlamourIntriguing... Real life tangles with his fantasy online world to create a heart-stopping page-turner
—— Good HousekeepingBlueeyedboy is unquestionably a masterpiece of deception and fantasy
—— Oxford TimesA dark exploration into the mind of an internet-obsessed would-be killer
—— RedCreepy psychodrama...BB's voice soon takes on the seductive cadences of her Gallic creations. Harris's triumph is to incorporate email-speak into this tale of rural nasties without frightening the horses
—— Independent






