Catalog

Record Details

Catalog Search



The wicked girls  Cover Image Book Book

The wicked girls / Alex Marwood.

Marwood, Alex, (author.).

Record details

  • ISBN: 0143123866 (pbk.)
  • ISBN: 9780143123866 (pbk.)
  • Physical Description: 378 pages ; 22 cm
  • Publisher: New York, New York : Penguin Books, 2013.

Content descriptions

General Note:
"First published in Great Britain by Sphere, an imprint of Little, Brown Book Group 2012"--T.p. verso.
Summary, etc.:
"A gritty, psychological thriller that asks the question: How well can you know anyone? On a fateful summer morning in 1986, two eleven-year-old girls meet for the first time. By the end of the day, they will both be charged with murder. Twenty-five years later, journalist Kirsty Lindsay is reporting on a series of sickening attacks on young female tourists in a seaside vacation town when her investigation leads her to interview carnival cleaner Amber Gordon. For Kirsty and Amber, it's the first time they've seen each other since that dark day so many years ago. Now with new, vastly different lives--and unknowing families to protect--will they really be able to keep their wicked secret hidden? Gripping and fast-paced, with an ending that will stay with you long after you've read it, The Wicked Girls will appeal to fans of the Academy Award-nominated film Heavenly Creatures and the novels of Rosamund Lupton and Chevy Stevens. "-- Provided by publisher.
Subject: Women journalists > Fiction.
Genre: Mystery fiction.

Available copies

  • 16 of 18 copies available at Bibliomation. (Show)
  • 0 of 0 copies available at Kent Memorial Library - Suffield.

Holds

  • 0 current holds with 18 total copies.
Sort by distance from:
Show Only Available Copies
Location Call Number / Copy Notes Barcode Shelving Location Status Due Date

Loading...
Syndetic Solutions - BookList Review for ISBN Number 0143123866
The Wicked Girls : A Novel
The Wicked Girls : A Novel
by Marwood, Alex
Rate this title:
vote data
Click an element below to view details:

BookList Review

The Wicked Girls : A Novel

Booklist


From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.

*Starred Review* Convicted of murdering a 4-year-old girl when they were 11, Jade and Bel spent the rest of their youth in two separate British correctional facilities. Upon their release as adults, they are given new names and the probationary condition that they never have contact again. But a series of murders in the struggling seaside town of Whitmouth brings renamed journalist Kirsty Lindsay face to face with the woman now known as Amber Gordon, a janitor at Funnland, where the latest body has been found. The two again find themselves connected over a violent crime. Marwood, the pseudonym of a British journalist, intersperses the contemporary serial-killer story line and hour-by-hour accounts of what happened the day the girls met and killed a preschooler. This chilling debut is chock-full of surprises. If Tana French and Gillian Flynn stayed up all night telling stories at an abandoned amusement park, this is awfully close to what they might come up with.--Keefe, Karen Copyright 2010 Booklist

Syndetic Solutions - Kirkus Review for ISBN Number 0143123866
The Wicked Girls : A Novel
The Wicked Girls : A Novel
by Marwood, Alex
Rate this title:
vote data
Click an element below to view details:

Kirkus Review

The Wicked Girls : A Novel

Kirkus Reviews


Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Marwood's chilling tale of two girls involved in the death of a small child and the resulting impact that act has on them is absorbing, plausible and unsettling. After circumstances throw Bel, the unwanted stepdaughter of a wealthy man, and Jade, the child of an outcast pig farmer, together, the two 11-year-olds find themselves on a destructive path that eventually reunites them more than two decades after the terrible deed that branded them as child killers. Hated and scorned by the public, vilified by the press, the two women are given new identities when they are released from custody and instructed never again to have contact with each other. Now they are Kirsty, a respectable freelance journalist with a husband and two children, and Amber, the manager of an amusement park in a slightly shabby seaside town. After a string of young women are murdered there, Kirsty travels to the town to cover the killings for one of her clients, eventually stumbling across Amber. It doesn't take long for them to realize how they know one another, and despite the order to remain apart, they soon find their paths intersecting with a deadly certainty. Marwood, a journalist writing under a pseudonym, constructs a tightly woven story that exposes the seamier side of human nature and the devastating circumstances that interwove the lives of these two women. Riveting from first page to last, this book unfolds by building on the unexpected. The author skillfully manages to populate the story with evil characters without ever going over the top, making the women sympathetic to the reader and keeping the suspense alive throughout. A suspenseful, buzz-worthy novel offering a sure-footed depiction of two women who lost their childhoods.]] Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Syndetic Solutions - New York Times Review for ISBN Number 0143123866
The Wicked Girls : A Novel
The Wicked Girls : A Novel
by Marwood, Alex
Rate this title:
vote data
Click an element below to view details:

New York Times Review

The Wicked Girls : A Novel

New York Times


August 25, 2013

Copyright (c) The New York Times Company

The term "thriller" usually triggers an image of some drooling serial killer who does unspeakable things to the women he holds captive on his pig farm. Or some mad hacker who has programmed a computer virus to reroute all your e-mails to Wiki-Leaks. Less likely to come to mind is a small town where high school seniors selling booze to underage juniors constitutes a crime wave. That's the context of Linwood Barclay's new mystery, A TAP ON THE WINDOW (New American Library, $25.95) , and, yes, it's a killer of a thriller. The small town of Griffon, not far from the Canadian border in western New York, isn't without its problems. There's that underage drinking , along with the growing popularity of drugs . (The son of the narrator, a private investigator named Cal Weaver, recently died when he jumped from the roof of a furniture store after taking Ecstasy.) And while a tough police force keeps the peace, the town is lining up on opposite sides of a feud between the chief of police and the mayor, who fears that his rival's strong-arm tactics are well outside the law. Weaver finds himself in the middle of a political smackdown when the unpopular mayor's popular daughter taps on his car window during a rainstorm asking for a lift, then demands to stop at a fast-food hangout. But the blonde who comes out of the rest room and gets back in his car isn't the same blonde he picked up. By the time he puzzles out the meaning behind the switch, the mayor's daughter, her boyfriend and her best friend have all gone missing. Barclay's convoluted "now you see me, now you don't" plot opens on such a low-key note that it's a shock when it takes offfor the narrative badlands. But even when he's tending to the gruesome details of the bad stuff, he never loses touch with the fundamental fear of people who live in nice communities like Griffon - that their children are beyond their control. As one of the adults puts it: "We were good parents. Except for when we weren't." "There's a gaudy, gutsy bravery to Whitmouth," Alex Marwood writes, demonstrating a deep, warm feeling for the shabby seaside town where she sets her harrowing first novel, THE WICKED GIRLS (Penguin, paper, $16). Amber Gordon is the kindhearted supervisor of a crew of cleaners who work after dark at a downmarket amusement park called Funnland. When Amber has the misfortune to come across the body of a girl in the hall of mirrors, it attracts the press, including a journalist named Kirsty Lindsay who barely recognizes Amber from the time when they were both 11 years old and were put away for casually killing a 6-year-old child leftin their care. Like the scruffy town where she's been living under an assumed name for 25 years, Amber is a bit gaudy, but also gutsy and brave, and it's distressing to watch her being physically attacked after she's unmasked as a notorious baby-killer. And while the received wisdom on violence committed by children seems to be that "some people just are born evil," Marwood makes a strong case that these crimes are more likely rooted in poverty, abuse and parental abandonment. Which makes it all the sadder when Amber finds herself locked out of Funnland, "the closest thing to a home she has left." The battles may be over in 1948 when THE CROOKED MAID (Bloomsbury, $26) opens in the first-class carriage of a train traveling from Paris. But both the living and the walking dead are still making their way home to Vienna in Dan Vyleta's second novel to be set in the shattered world of postwar Europe. Anna Beer expects to rendezvous with her husband, Dr. Anton Beer, a psychiatrist whose application of "the talking cure" saved the life of the suicidal commander of his P.O.W. camp. Robert Seidel, the 18-year-old schoolboy who finds himself sharing a compartment with this mysterious older woman, has been called to the bedside of his stepfather, who sustained serious injuries when he fell (or was pushed) from a window in the family mansion. The lives of these two strangers become intricately (if much too expediently) entwinedテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソ テつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソ テつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソ テつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソ テつソ テつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソ テつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソ テつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソ テつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソ テつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソ テつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソ テつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソ テつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソ テつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソ テつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソ テつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソ テつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソ テつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソ テつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソ テつソテつソ テつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソ テつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソ テつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソ テつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソ テつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソ テつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソ テつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソ テつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソ テつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ テつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソテつソ

Syndetic Solutions - Publishers Weekly Review for ISBN Number 0143123866
The Wicked Girls : A Novel
The Wicked Girls : A Novel
by Marwood, Alex
Rate this title:
vote data
Click an element below to view details:

Publishers Weekly Review

The Wicked Girls : A Novel

Publishers Weekly


(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

A rundown British seaside amusement park, Funnland, provides the backdrop for the pseudonymous Marwood's memorable first novel. Thanks to U.K. rehab policies, impoverished Jade Walker and neglected Bel Oldacre-accused, arrested, and sentenced as 11-year-olds for murdering a six-year-old girl in 1986-have become in 2011 Kirsty Lindsay, a newspaper stringer with an out-of-work husband, and Amber Gordon, a big-hearted Funnland cleaner, living with a handsome, enigmatic man given to black moods. Though the law forbids the two to meet, Amber's discovery of a teenage girl's body-the third local murder that year-in Innfinnity, the park's creepy hall of mirrors, and Kirsty's assignment to get the story behind the killings bring them together again. Marwood fills this disturbing thriller with sordid red herrings and brutal reflections of lower- and middle-class economic hardships, grinding in the sadly familiar message that societal injustice cruelly distorts women's lives. (Aug.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.


Additional Resources