One of CrimeReads' Most Anticipated Crime Books of 2019
Goodreads: 39 Big Books of Spring
“What a ride. I loved this book and the brilliant Hitchcockian twist!” —Sarah Michelle Gellar
“Superb no-holds-barred plotting. This story romps toward a startling and totally unexpected conclusion, which will satisfy the most experienced thriller fans.” —Daily Mail (UK)
“Stiletto-sharp writing, and characters so real you’ll be looking over your shoulder long after the final page. With I Know Who You Are, Alice Feeney has single-handedly made the bookmark obsolete.” —Christina Dalcher, author of Vox
“Feeney is quickly establishing herself as a luminary of psychological thrillers, a reputation this novel is sure to bolster. This is suspense as it was meant to be written.” —CrimeReads
“A tightly woven, intricately plotted, heart-in-your-throat thriller, I couldn’t put this book down! I Know Who You Are is expertly crafted and tightly plotted. I never once guessed the end—and that is something of a feat for me!” —Christina McDonald, author of The Night Olivia Fell
“A fiendishly well-plotted, deliciously dark, and twisting read—it kept me guessing throughout and reading way past my bedtime. Readers, you are in for a huge treat.” —Lucy Foley, author of The Hunting Party
“A brilliant twisting, cutting, and biting examination of identity and desire.” —Ross Armstrong, author of The Watcher
“Twisty and gripping.” —Jane Fallon, bestselling author of Faking Friends
“A roller coaster of a ride. Alice Feeney goes where others might fear to tread. I loved it!” —Jane Corry, Sunday Times bestselling author of My Husband’s Wife and The Dead Ex
“A dark and twisted tale. I didn’t know who to trust!” —Louise Jensen, author of The Sister and The Date
“Dark, but utterly compelling. I couldn’t stop reading it.” —Ruth Jones, bestselling author of Never Greener
“I Know Who You Are blew me away! Sharp writing and enough twists to make you dizzy.” —Lisa Hall, author of Between You and Me and The Party
“I could not put it down, another compelling and devilishly twisted tale from Alice Feeney...brilliant!” —Kate Silverton, BBC News (UK)
“Devoured it in almost one go. I was utterly absorbed in Aimee’s dark, mysterious secrets, the past, and her unraveling life. It’s a twisty, gripping, clever, brilliant read.” —Karen Hamilton, Sunday Times bestselling author of The Perfect Girlfriend
“Clever, compulsive…you will never guess the ending of this one!” —Louise Candlish, Sunday Times bestselling author
02/18/2019
For most folks, being suspected in the disappearance of their spouse would be about as bad as it gets, but not for London actress Aimee Sinclair, the narrator of bestseller Feeney’s shock-filled second thriller (after 2018’s Sometimes I Lie). Aimee’s past is much darker than the disturbing film with a famous director for which she desperately wants to audition—and her future seems to be barreling full tilt toward the stuff of nightmares. For starters, Aimee’s husband of two years, journalist Ben Bailey, vanishes from their Notting Hill town house the day after they have a fight and she asks him for a divorce. The balance of their joint bank account also disappears, and there’s security footage of a woman who could be her doppelgänger making the withdrawal. Feeney displays her linguistic flair in the chapters devoted to her heroine’s harrowing early years, but this affecting backstory seems part of a different, better novel than the present-day story with its cardboard characters on a plot-powered roller coaster. The action speeds toward a finale that’s about as subtle as an ax. Fans of over-the-top psychological thrillers will be satisfied. Agent: Jonny Gellar, Curtis Brown. (Apr.)
Narrator Stephanie Racine masterfully keeps the listener’s attention even as this story gets stranger and more uncomfortable with every second. When actress Aimee Sinclair’s husband goes missing, she is sure a past stalker is responsible. But she can't prove it to the London police. Racine skillfully moves between a posh English accent and the Irish accent of a scared child as she weaves together two intricately entwined crime stories. The fear, anxiety, and confusion in Racine’s voice are palpable as the listener follows Aimee’s struggle to figure out who could be impersonating her and trying to frame her for murder. V.B. © AudioFile 2019, Portland, Maine
Narrator Stephanie Racine masterfully keeps the listener’s attention even as this story gets stranger and more uncomfortable with every second. When actress Aimee Sinclair’s husband goes missing, she is sure a past stalker is responsible. But she can't prove it to the London police. Racine skillfully moves between a posh English accent and the Irish accent of a scared child as she weaves together two intricately entwined crime stories. The fear, anxiety, and confusion in Racine’s voice are palpable as the listener follows Aimee’s struggle to figure out who could be impersonating her and trying to frame her for murder. V.B. © AudioFile 2019, Portland, Maine