Four friends, one weekend, and a bet that changes everyone's lives...
Set over a long weekend in East Anglia, this is the chilling story of a rivalrous friendship - as told with deceptive casualness by the narrator, Ian. It opens with a surprise phone call from an old university friend, inviting Ian and his wife, Em, for a few days by the sea. Their hosts, Ollie and Daisy, are a golden couple, and the scene is set for sunlit relaxation.
But dangerous tensions quickly emerge, and in the stifling atmosphere of a remote cottage in the hottest days of summer, Ollie and Ian resurrect a bet made twenty years before. Each day becomes a series of challenges for higher and higher stakes, setting in train actions that will have irreversible consequences.
Four friends, one weekend, and a bet that changes everyone's lives...
Set over a long weekend in East Anglia, this is the chilling story of a rivalrous friendship - as told with deceptive casualness by the narrator, Ian. It opens with a surprise phone call from an old university friend, inviting Ian and his wife, Em, for a few days by the sea. Their hosts, Ollie and Daisy, are a golden couple, and the scene is set for sunlit relaxation.
But dangerous tensions quickly emerge, and in the stifling atmosphere of a remote cottage in the hottest days of summer, Ollie and Ian resurrect a bet made twenty years before. Each day becomes a series of challenges for higher and higher stakes, setting in train actions that will have irreversible consequences.
Four friend, one weekend, and a bet that changes everyone's lives...
Born in Skipton, Yorkshire, Blake Morrison is the author of two bestselling memoirs, And When Did You Last See Your Father? and Things My Mother Never Told Me, two novels (most recently the acclaimed South of the River and The Last Weekend), and a study of the Bulger case, As If. He is also a poet, critic, journalist and librettist. He teaches Creative Writing at Goldsmiths College, and lives in south London.
The fascination is horrible, the prose addictive, the situation
magnificently claustrophobic, the denouement shocking
*Herald*
Morrison has created far more than a sinister take on the
country-house novel... This is a suspenseful thriller, but more
importantly it succeeds as an exceedingly clever investigation into
the strangeness of lies
*Independent on Sunday*
A compelling psychological thriller that, in parts, will cause you
to actually flinch
*Metro*
Delightfully twisted
*Esquire*
This is one achievement among several for Blake Morrison, who has
written a novel that is at once artful and naturalistic, restrained
and yet suggestive, and faithful to a perspective from which the
readers wants to recoil
*Times Literary Supplement*
![]() |
Ask a Question About this Product More... |
![]() |