#BookReview: TALKING TO STRANGERS by Fiona Barton @figbarton @TransworldBooks

Publication: 15th August 2024 – Transworld

Three women. One Killer.
Talking to strangers has never been more dangerous…

When the body of forty-four-year-old Karen Simmons is found abandoned in remote woodland, journalist Kiki Nunn is determined this will be the big break she so desperately needs.

Because she has a head start on all the other reporters. Just a week before Karen was killed, Kiki interviewed her about the highs and lows of mid-life romance. Karen told her all about kissing strangers on the beach under the stars, expensive meals, roses. About the scammers and the creeps…

While the police appear to be focusing on local suspects, Kiki sets out to write the definitive piece on one woman’s fatal search for love. But she will soon learn that the search for truth can be just as deadly…

AMAZON

WATERSTONES

I really enjoyed Talking to Strangers. It’s a gripping, thought-provoking and suspenseful read, and, even though I guessed a few things, it still took me by surprise.

The story is told from the perspectives of three strong women whose lives are affected by the murder of a local woman. The first is DI Elise King, in charge of solving the murder. Just back from receiving cancer treatment, she is still struggling to settle back on the job. I don’t know how I missed the first book in this series, because I really liked the character of Elise King and I am already looking forward to reading more about her. I liked her determination, not only in her job, but in her life, too.

The other perspective is Kiki Nunn, a journalist who knew the victim because she was writing an article about dating in your forties and was interviewing her and her group of singles. She needs an exclusive article that will get her out of writing boring articles for the local newspaper and get her national, even if this may mean putting herself in dangerous situations. I didn’t always like her character because she didn’t always behave morally, but I guess that was part of her job.

And then there is Annie. This murder brings back memories of the murder of her young son, a few years earlier, in the same woods as this murder. The grief and the sadness rush all back as she still wonders why her son was killed.

Last but not least, there is Karen Simmons, the victim. We meet her briefly in the beginning and then through the stories of those who knew her. All she ever wanted was to fall in love, but the men she met didn’t always want the same thing. Was she killed by one of the men she met online?

I love Fiona Barton’s writing style. The pace, the twists, the suspense kept me glued to the pages and I am already looking forward to reading more from this author.

A huge thank you to Transworld and NetGalley for providing me with a proof of the novel in exchange for an honest review.

Fiona Barton‘s debut, The Widow, was a Sunday Times and New York Times bestseller, and has been published in thirty-seven countries and optioned for television. Her second novel, The Child, and her third, The Suspect, were both bestsellers. Born in Cambridge, Fiona currently lives on the south coast in West Sussex.

Previously, she was a senior writer at the Daily Mail, news editor at the Daily Telegraph, and chief reporter at the Mail on Sunday, where she won Reporter of the Year at the British Press Awards.

While working as a journalist, Fiona reported on many high-profile criminal cases and developed a fascination with watching those involved, their body language and verbal tics. She interviewed people at the heart of these crimes, from the guilty to their families, as well as those on the periphery, and found it was those just outside the spotlight who interested her most…

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