Author:Rachel Heath
It is 1946, and seventeen-year-old Laura Telling is stagnating in her dilapidated Sussex family home, while her eccentric parents slip further into isolation. A chance encounter with Paul Lovell offers her the chance to alter the course of her destiny - and to embark on a new life in South Africa.
Many miles north, sixteen-year-old Gay Gibson is desperate to escape Birkenhead. When the girls' paths cross in Johannesburg, Laura is exposed to Gay's wild life of parties and inappropriate liaisons. Each in their own worlds, but thrown together, the girls find their lives inextricably entangled, with fatal consequences...
A dark, compelling debut ... Heath skilfully recreates the trajectory of Gibson's life, but it's Trelling's equally damaged character ... which provides the vital emotional charge
—— Daily MailHeath combines imaginative, fast paced story telling with an unerring sense of period, place and mood... an exceptionally well-written, suspenseful novel.
—— GuardianExcellent on the atmosphere of post-war Britain and the lure of South Africa... compellingly told, reminiscent of early Doris Lessing ... the twists keep the reader glued to the novel.
—— Independent...thrillingly macabre.
—— Daily TelegraphExcellent ... There is a compulsion and persuasive assurance in the writing
—— Sunday TimesA strong, dark and original story, told by an engrossing new voice in English fiction
—— Miranda SeymourAn exceptionally well-written, suspenseful novel ... with an unerring sense of period, place and mood
—— GuardianThe strength of this book is its evocation of powerful sexuality and its capturing the flavour of South Africa 50 years ago.
—— MSLEXIAHeath's reckless, innocent Laura, caught in the upheaval and cruelty of an unjust system that mingled bloodshed with the tennis club and the bitchy tea party, is unforgettable
—— MSLEXIARachel Heath explores the dangers of intimacy, the secrets behind ordinary existences, the fruitlessness of the search for a home, and, ultimately, the grim inevitability of disaster. A promising debut from a startling new voice.
—— Waterstone's Books Quarterly[A] gripping tale...
—— RedThe closest thing I can compare it to is The Secret History by Donna Tart.
—— IndependentRachel Heath is excellent on the atmosphere of post-war Britain and the lure of South Africa.
—— IndependentThis author is good at sex, writing well about female sensuality.
—— IndependentThe interweaving of the lives of Gay and Laura is skilfully handled, the plot ever-thickening as the two move towards that fatal voyage back to Britain.
—— IndependentRachel Heath's dark compelling debut novel tells the tale of two very different girls; both are misfits trying to find a story in which they can star.
—— Daily Mail... examines the extraordinary lengths people will go to when driven by love.
—— Easy LivingThose who survive do dreadful things. This is the nub of their experiences and also, hints the author of our own.
—— The Sunday TimesA highly accomplished debut, this is a chilling portrait of racial tension, social immorality, betrayal and love, and also an atmospheric examination of the end of innocence.
—— The Lady MagazineThe writing is strong and though the sections featuring Gay's earlier life lose momentum, the story picks up pace when the girls' paths become entwined and the conclusion is compelling and thrillingly macabre.
—— TelegraphThis fictional account of a true story gives a darkly shocking version of the events surrounding this tragic case.
—— Good Book GuideBrilliantly melds a factual post-war murder into a dark fictional tale
—— Telegraph