Books

  1. Shelfari

    Shelfari edited the description of The Treatment: A Novel Saturday, August 1 2009.

    • The troubled hero of Mo Hayder’s Birdman , which "gripped the mind even as it quickened the pulse" ( New York Times ), returns in an expertly crafted chiller that brings him face to face with haunting memories and palpable fears. A riveting mixture of psychological intrigue and forensic detail, Birdman introduced a compelling new voice to the thriller genre. Kirkus Reviews pronounced it a "top-notch debut thriller, a deftly plotted assault on the nerves." Elle magazine promised, "It’ll scare the hell out of you." In The Treatment , Mo Hayder once again plumbs the darkest recesses of the human mind as she sends Detective Jack Caffery on the trail of a villain capable of unspeakable perversion. It is the middle of the summer in Brockwell Park, a pleasant residential area in London. Behind the placid facade of one house, a man and his wife lie tied up and imprisoned in their own home. When they are discovered, badly dehydrated and bearing the marks of a brutal beating, they reveal one final horror: Their young son has disappeared. Called in to investigate, Jack Caffery uses all the tricks of the forensic investigator’s trade to piece together the scanty clues at the crime scene. But the echoes of a heartrending disappearance in his own past make it almost impossible for him to view the crime with scientific detachment. As Jack digs deeper, attempting to hold his own life together as the disturbing parallels between past and present mount, the real nightmares begin.

    ( see all changes to this book’s description )
  2. Shelfari

    Shelfari edited the contributors of The Treatment: A Novel Wednesday, July 22 2009.

    • Added a contributor: Mo Hayder: (Primary Author)
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  3. Shelfari

    Shelfari edited the first sentence of The Treatment: A Novel Thursday, July 16 2009.

    • WHEN IT WAS ALL OVER, DI Jack Caffery, South London Area Major Investigation Team (AMIT), would admit that, of all the things he had witnessed in Brixton that cloudy July evening, it was the crows that jarred him the most.
    ( see all changes to this book’s first sentence )
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