Joe O'Loughlin is on familiar territorystanding on a bridge high above a flooded gorge, trying to stop a distraught woman from jumping. She is naked, wearing only high-heel shoes, sobbing into a cell phone. Suddenly, she turns to him and whispers, "You dont understand," and lets go. Joe is shattered by the suicide and haunted by his failure to save the woman, until her teenage daughter finds him and reveals that her mother would never have committed suicidenot like that. She was terrified of heights. Compelled to investigate, Joe is soon obsessed with discovering who was on the other end of the phone. What could have driven her to commit such a desperate act? Whose voice? What evil?
Having devoted his career to repairing damaged minds, Joe must now confront an adversary who tears them apart: a man who searches for the cracks in a persons psyche and claws his fingers inside, destroying what makes them whole.
With pitch-perfect dialogue, believable characters, and intriguingly unpredictable plot twists, Shatter is guaranteed to keep even the most avid thriller readers riveted long into the night.
"Even the sharpest readers may not anticipate all of the plot's agile switchbacks or foresee the chilling climax." - Publishers Weekly.
"Robotham once again delivers." - Library Journal.
"Shatter will have you turning the pages compulsively, desperate to get to the end, but not daring to miss a word." The Times (London)
"Starred Review. Robotham sharpens the conventional horrors with his unerring eye for psychological detail, his mastery of pace and his spooky villain, a manipulator as monstrous as Hannibal Lecter." - Kirkus Reviews.
"This is Robothams best psychological thriller." - Daily Mirror (London).
"Thematically complex, artfully structured, beautifully written and observed, Shatter confirms Robothams place in the front row." - Sydney Morning Herald (Australia).
"Michael Robotham delivers another gem, confirming his growing reputation." - Spanningsblog (Netherlands).
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Any "Author Information" displayed below reflects the author's biography at the time this particular book was published.
Gold Dagger winning and Edgar short-listed author Michael Robotham was born in Australia in November 1960 and grew up in small country towns that had more dogs than people and more flies than dogs. He escaped in 1979 and became a cadet journalist on an afternoon newspaper in Sydney.
For the next fourteen years he wrote for newspapers and magazines in Australia, Britain and America. As a senior feature writer for the UK's Mail on Sunday he was among the first people to view the letters and diaries of Czar Nicholas II and his wife Empress Alexandra, unearthed in the Moscow State Archives in 1991. He also gained access to Stalin's Hitler files, which had been missing for nearly fifty years until a cleaner stumbled upon a cardboard box that had been misplaced and misfiled.
In 1993 he ...
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Link to Michael Robotham's Website
Sometimes I think we're alone. Sometimes I think we're not. In either case, the thought is staggering.
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