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Daisy in Chains

A Novel

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
A "chilling tale of a master manipulator who leaves nothing to chance" from the award-winning author of the Lacey Flint novels (Kirkus Reviews, starred review).
He's a serial killer. A murderer of young women, all killed in brutal attacks.
But despite Hamish Wolfe's conviction, he's always stuck to his story—he's innocent and he's been wrongly imprisoned. And now he wants someone to investigate and, more importantly, to write his story.
Maggie Rose is a notorious defense attorney and writer whose specialty is getting convictions overturned. At first, Maggie is reluctant to even acknowledge Hamish's requests to meet, ignoring his letters. But this is a very charismatic and persuasive man, good-looking and intelligent.
Eventually even she can't resist his lure . . .
"If ever a novel should be read with a friend, Sharon Bolton's Daisy Chains is it. (You really don't want to face that mind-blowing ending alone.)" —The New York Times Book Review
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      July 18, 2016
      Cancer-surgeon Hamish Wolfe, the villain of this plodding and predictable thriller from Mary Higgins Clark Award–winner Bolton (Little Black Lies), is stuck at Parkhurst prison on the Isle of Wight, having been convicted two years earlier for the murders of three overweight women in Somerset. The outside campaign to secure his release, known as the Wolfe Pack and led by his mother, reaches out to reclusive but successful attorney and author Maggie Rose, whose success rate for overturning the guilty convictions of seemingly heinous criminals is astonishing. Rose, who’s reluctant to invest time in a case that seems airtight, befriends Det. Sgt. Pete Weston, the case’s lead detective. At first, nothing points to another killer, but Rose smells a rat. She wades into the murky waters of Wolfe’s Oxford past and the socially charged debate over body image that plagues the case and its victims. In a text overflowing with letters and emails, Bolton leaves little room for any real suspense or richly developed characters. Agent: Anne-Marie Doulton, Ampersand Agency (U.K.).

    • Kirkus

      Starred review from July 15, 2016
      A serial killer bids for freedom with the aid of an unconventional lawyer.From his refusal to plead either guilty or innocent at his trial for the murders of Zoe Sykes, Jessie Trout, Chloe Wood, and Myrtle Reid, suave, handsome surgeon Hamish Wolfe has confounded the police and the press by his behavior. Some speculate that he's angling for an insanity plea. DC Peter Weston of the Avon and Somerset police insists, "He's playing games with us." The only thing that remains consistent before and after his conviction is Hamish's insistence that he's innocent, as he assures his fellow inmates at HMP Isle of Wight-Parkhurst, his family, his legion of rabid followers, including Andy Bear, Mike Shiven, Sirocco Silverwood, and a pair of travelers known only as Odi and Broon who hold rallies and sponsor fairs to argue his case in the press. Nowhere are his pleas more urgent than in his beautifully crafted letters to defense attorney Maggie Rose, famous for exonerating serial killers and repurposing her cases into bestsellers. Maggie resists Hamish's advances, even when reinforced in person by his mother. But the more she hears, the more she reads, the more intrigued she becomes. Chapters of her next book take shape, sketching details of Hamish's crimes, his trial, and his long-ago involvement with the Fat Club, a group of Oxford undergrads whose filming of their sexual exploits with overweight partners is the presumed back story to his murder of four overweight women. As Hamish and Maggie circle each other, it's hard to see who's the cat and who's the mouse and impossible to predict where their deadly dance will lead. No detail should be missed, no nuance overlooked in Bolton's chilling tale of a master manipulator who leaves nothing to chance.

      COPYRIGHT(2016) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Booklist

      August 1, 2016
      Maggie Rose is a best-selling true-crime writer who chooses her projects carefully. Hamish Wolfe is a serial killer convicted of murdering at least three plus-size women, and he also happens to be good looking and charismaticso much so that he has a fan club, led by his mother. Mother and son try to engage Maggie to prove Hamish innocent, but they are unable to offer any new evidence or alternative theories. Nevertheless, Maggie is intrigued and decides to do a little preliminary digging. She speaks with the case detective, visits Hamish in prison, and speaks with the group that wants him freed. There are enough anomalies that Maggie investigates further and turns up some interesting evidence. Meanwhile, someone is snooping around her house, and the tension ratchets up after a break-in. The story is enriched with newspaper articles and various prison letters, and the narrative offers a trail of red herrings. Unfortunately, the ending goes off the rails, in part because yet another author feels obligated to have her unreliable narrator nod to Gillian Flynn's Gone Girl (2012).(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2016, American Library Association.)

    • Library Journal

      August 1, 2016

      Hamish Wolfe has served two years in prison for the murders of four obese women. He claims innocence and contacts controversial lawyer and best-selling author Maggie Rose to overturn his conviction--and write his story. Prepare to be drawn into this mystery through alternating perspectives and Bolton's epistolary style, which serve to misdirect readers and only provide subtle clues to the truth. Through the newspaper articles, love letters, book drafts, and the traditional narrative, readers will learn of Wolfe's off-kilter fan club, the budding relationship between Maggie and the detective on the case, and why these four lives were taken. VERDICT The literary styling of this latest work from Bolton (Little Black Lies; "Lacey Flint" series) makes this a quick read, but the multiple plot threads will occupy readers' minds for days after they finish. Fans of Lisa Gardner and Karin Slaughter will savor this twisty crime novel that invites many rereadings. [See Prepub Alert, 3/14/16.]--Natalie Browning, J. Sargeant Reynolds Community Coll. Lib., Richmond, VA

      Copyright 2016 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Library Journal

      April 1, 2016

      Defense attorney Maggie Rose, also a skilled writer, is not universally appreciated for her ability to overturn convictions. Hamish Wolfe, imprisoned for a series of nasty killings he claims not to have committed, wants Maggie to prove his innocence--and write his story. He surely is charming and persuasive. Mary Higgins Clark Award winner Bolton used to published as S.J. Bolton.

      Copyright 2016 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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