Skin Deep: The twisted, unputdownable No. 1 bestselling crime thriller from the author of Strange Sally Diamond

· Penguin UK
4.6
28 reviews
Ebook
384
Pages
Eligible
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About this ebook

'Pure genius. Absolutely brilliant' Shari Lapena

'A twisted thriller, reminiscent of Patricia Highsmith' Ian Rankin

IBA Crime Fiction Book of the Year Winner 2018

___________

WINNER of the Dead Good Books Award for the Book That You Can't Put Down!



She's not who you think she is . . .

'I could probably have been an actress.
It is not difficult to pretend to be somebody else.
Isn't that what I've been doing for most of my life?'

Cordelia Russell has been living on the French Riviera for twenty-five years, passing herself off as an English socialite. But her luck, and the kindness of strangers, have run out.

The arrival of a visitor from her distant past shocks Cordelia. She reacts violently to the intrusion and flees her flat to spend a drunken night at a glittering party. As dawn breaks she stumbles home through the back streets. Even before she opens her door she can hear the flies buzzing. She did not expect the corpse inside to start decomposing quite so quickly . . .

___________


'Bloody brilliant!' Denise Mina

'Extraordinary' A.J. Finn

'The finest psychological thriller writer currently at work' Tammy Cohen

'Dark, brutal and brilliant' Colette McBeth

'Absorbing, beautifully written' The Times, Crime Books of the Year

'Every bit as amazing as her first two [novels]' Lisa Jewell

'Dazzling . . . chilling, mesmerising and, ultimately, devastating. Pure storytelling genius' Mark Edwards

Ratings and reviews

4.6
28 reviews
Midge Odonnell
November 1, 2018
This book wasn't what I was expecting from either the blurb or the opening stanzas; it was far, far better than that. I am not so sure I would call it a thriller though, for me this was more of an expose of a damaged woman's inner emotion and her descent in to sociopathy (at best). Delia is very, very damaged and how much is just her nature and how much is due to the nurture of her father is up for debate and there is a lot here to endlessly debate. Delia is eminently unlikeable, she is only interested in herself and she expects everyone to treat her with the Queenly deference that her father has brought her up to believe is her due. Somehow though, she is completely self aware and this made her eminently likeable. Delia has no compunction in describing her manipulations and her lack of love, or even interest, in her only child and this, somehow, got me on her side. The infrequent asides from the people in her life describing what just occurred from their point of view give a much more rounded portrait of the events and suck you further in to the various worlds from Inishcrann to London to Nice to Monaco. Couple these with her Father's bedtime stories (which are Grimm Fairytales for grown ups) based on his love of their little Irish Island and you begin to see why Delia is the way she is. Ultimately all she wants is the adoration her father told her was her due and she will do anything to get it. The story telling here is very good and Liz Nugent sucks you right in to the fictional world's she has created. Fictional worlds with just enough of reality to make you believe in the characters wholeheartedly and to eagerly turn the pages to find out just what will happen to them next. The ghosting of previous acquaintances when they no longer serve a purpose for Delia rang very true and others ghosting of her when she is unmasked felt just as valid. So, why not 5 Stars? I did feel the ending was a little bit of a cop out and that it was slightly rushed towards. Whether this was an editorial decision or the looming of a deadline I don't know but after the care taken to describe all the major events in Delia's life it just felt somehow sloppy. I was also unconvinced by the surgery she had but you have to allow some artictic license in these things. If you like your characters dark and twisted then this is definitely a book for you. Certainly not a standard thriller but absorbing and well crafted with a good understanding, by the author, of certain psychological traits. THIS IS AN HONEST AND UNBIASED REVIEW OF A FREE COPY OF THE BOOK RECEIVED VIA THE PIGEONHOLE
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Sonia Bonini-Gill
October 3, 2020
Different but very well written, with a magnetic and complex main character that I hated but felt drawn to at the same time. I enjoyed this book a lot.
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Kylie Anderson
August 14, 2019
This one strikes to the core. The main character is so unlikeable and cold yet there's something that makes you almost root for her. Best book I've read this year, I can imagine this one will stick with me for a while. Bleak ending tho..
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About the author

Before becoming a full-time writer, Liz Nugent worked in film, theatre and television. Her five novels - Unravelling Oliver, Lying in Wait, Skin Deep, Our Little Cruelties and Strange Sally Diamond - have each been Number One bestsellers and she has won four Irish Book Awards, as well as the James Joyce Medal for Literature. She lives in Dublin.

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