'Ruth Kelly is my go-to for destination thrillers' - Andrea Mara, bestselling author of No One Saw A Thing
'A great thriller writer' - John Marrs, bestselling author of What Lies Between Us
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She was your best friend. Now she's missing. And everyone suspects you.
People drift apart. You and Georgie were inseparable once; she knew you better than anyone. But that was then.
Now, out of the blue, Georgie's back. She's inviting you to a glamorous New Year's Eve afterparty in Amsterdam - a chance to relive the good old days and the fun you used to have.
You go. You laugh. You remember.
But then Georgie vanishes.
And just like that, you're the prime suspect.
She knows all your secrets – the ones you've managed to bury. But as the clock ticks and the accusations mount, you're left with one terrifying thought: how well do you really know her?
From bestselling, Richard & Judy book club pick author Ruth Kelly, The Afterparty is perfect for fans of Lisa Jewell and Sarah Pearse.
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Praise for Ruth Kelly:
'Queen of the chilling thriller' - Veronica Henry, Sunday Times bestselling author of The Impulse Purchase
'Deliciously addictive' - TM Logan, Sunday Times bestselling author of The Daughter
'Dark, immersive and tantalizingly atmospheric' - Andrea Mara, Sunday Times bestselling author of No One Saw A Thing
'Page-turning' - BP Walter, Sunday Times bestselling author of The Dinner Guest
'I loved every page of this delicious thriller' - Caroline Corcoran, Sunday Times bestselling author of Through The Wall
'Beautifully paced and darkly twisted' - Katy Brent, bestselling author of How To Kill Men and Get Away With It
'Addictive' - Woman's Weekly
'Original and well-told' - Daily Mail
'Tantalizing twists' - Heat
'A pacy page-turner' - Woman & Home
Ruth Kelly is a journalist who has ghosted a string of Sunday Times top ten bestsellers – with The Prison Doctor having sold over 250,000 copies and The Governor going straight to number one on the Amazon charts and number five on the Sunday Times bestseller list.
Holiday destinations feature heavily in her thriller writing, with Ruth having spent most of her life travelling and exploring the world. Her family relocated to Papua New Guinea when she was seven years old and the travel bug hasn’t let up since. The simmering threat of what lies beneath the surface – the dichotomy of how paradise can also be hell – fascinates Ruth. Making a destination a character in its own right - both a friend and an enemy, not someone to be trusted – is a thread explored throughout her writing.