by RossArmstrong (Author)
`An eerily atmospheric reworking of Hitchcock's Rear Window' - The Guardian
She's watching you, but who's watching her?
Lily Gullick lives with her husband Aiden in a new-build flat opposite an estate which has been marked for demolition. A keen birdwatcher, she can't help spying on her neighbours.
Until one day Lily sees something suspicious through her binoculars and soon her elderly neighbour Jean is found dead. Lily, intrigued by the social divide in her local area as it becomes increasingly gentrified, knows that she has to act. But her interference is not going unnoticed, and as she starts to get close to the truth, her own life comes under threat.
But can Lily really trust everything she sees?
`Ross Armstrong will feed your appetite for suspense' - Evening Standard
Format: Paperback
Pages: 402
Edition: First edition
Publisher: HQ
Published: 21 Sep 2017
ISBN 10: 0008181179
ISBN 13: 9780008181178
`Addictive and eerie, you'll finish the book wanting to chat about it' - Closer Magazine, Must Read
`A twisted homage to Hitchcock set in a recognisably post-Brexit broken Britain. Tense, fast-moving and with an increasingly unreliable narrator, The Watcher has all the hallmarks of a winner.' - Martyn Waites
`Ross Armstrong will feed your appetite for suspense' - Evening Standard
`Unreliable narrator + Rear Window-esque plot = sure-fire hit' - The Sun
`Brilliantly written...this psychological thriller is definitely one that will keep you up to the early hours. Five Stars.' - Heat, Book of the Week
`A dark, unsettling page turner' - Claire Douglas, author of Local Girl Missing.
`Creepy and compelling' - Debbie Howells author of The Bones of You
`The Watcher is an intense, unsettling read... one that had me feeling like I needed to keep checking over my shoulder as I read.; - Lisa Hall, author of Between You and Me
Ross Armstrong is a British stage and screen actor who has performed in the West End of London, on Broadway and in theatres throughout the UK. After gaining a BA in English Literature and Theatre at Warwick University, Ross joined the National Youth Theatre where his contemporaries included Matt Smith and Rafe Spall. The idea for his debut novel The Watcher came to him when he moved into a new apartment block and discovered whilst looking at the moon through binoculars that he could see into his neighbours' homes. Thankfully for them, he put down his binoculars and picked up his pen.