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This Is How It Ends

ebook
2 of 2 copies available
2 of 2 copies available
Sunday Times Crime Book of the Month
The Times Crime Book of the Month
Mail on Sunday Thriller of the Week
'Elegantly crafted, humane and thought-provoking. She's top drawer' Ian Rankin
This is how it begins.
With a near-empty building, the inhabitants forced out of their homes by property developers.
With two women: idealistic, impassioned blogger Ella and seasoned campaigner, Molly.
With a body hidden in a lift shaft.
But how will it end?
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      January 22, 2018
      British crime writer Dolan (the Zigic and Ferreira series) delivers an intriguing standalone about a crime involving a London police official’s daughter and secret motives. Narrator and protagonist Ella Riordan, a police academy dropout and aspiring writer, meets the novel’s second narrator, Molly Fader, a photographer who documents protest movements, when a policeman bashes Ella during a peaceful demonstration. The two, now friends united by their revolutionary spirit, join forces to protest the real estate developers taking over Molly’s apartment building in order to build more expensive high-rise buildings while the dwindling tenants put up with horrific conditions. Ella, hoping to make the place a cause célèbre to enhance her revolutionary credentials, throws a party there. Someone from Ella’s past crashes the party and ends updead by Ella’s hand—in self-defense, Ella claims to Molly. Molly believes Ella’s claim and helps her make it look like an accident. Is Ella who she says she is, or are her real intentions nefarious? The novel is cleverly plotted; Dolan nicely ramps up suspense on the way to its shocking ending.

    • Library Journal

      December 1, 2017

      This is how it begins: a rooftop party in London celebrates the resolve of tenacious tenants to remain in their poky building despite the threats of overreaching property developers to force them out. Ella Riordan is the poster face of protest, attractive, as well as the daughter of a high-ranking police official. Before it is over, she ends up with a dead body on her hands and seeks the help of her friend and longtime protester Molly Fader to help her dispose of the corpse down the elevator shaft. The remainder of the story follows Molly from the party onward, while Ella's story unspools backward from the party to the events leading up to it. The emphasis is not so much on the identity of the body as on the meaning of different types of solidarity: the bonds uniting protesters, the relationships among women, the power of the thin blue line, and the links between reporters and their sources. This is a telling snapshot of a London recognizable today from Occupy London protests and absentee oligarchical landlords to such tragedies as the Grenfell Tower fire. VERDICT Dolan's stand-alone psychological mystery follows her successful "Zigic and Ferreira" crime series, which has been nominated for major mystery awards, and will appeal to fans of socially conscious fiction.--Bob Lunn, Kansas City, MO

      Copyright 2017 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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