by Mel Mc Grath (Author)
On a night out, four friends lose each other in the crowd - and, separately, they each witness a stranger in trouble.
One by one, they each decide to do nothing to help.
Later, a body washes up on the banks of the Thames - and the group realises that ignoring the victim has left blood on their hands.
But why did each of them refuse to step in? Why did none of them want to be noticed that night? Who is really responsible?
Is it possible the victim was not really a stranger at all?
Format: Hardcover
Pages: 384
Publisher: HQ
Published: 07 Mar 2019
ISBN 10: 0008326169
ISBN 13: 9780008326166
Praise for Give me the Child
`Dark, clever, terrifying' Paula Hawkins
`You won't want to eat, sleep or blink'
Tammy Cohen
`A triumph. A mesmerisingly written examination of desperation and evil'
Financial Times
`Taut and compelling' Good Housekeeping
`Gripping and moving'
Erin Kelly
'A beautifully written and very unsettling read.'
Ann Cleeves
`Hugely addictive and highly recommended'
Sarah Hilary
`Completely unputdownable'
Lisa Hall
`Utterly terrifying - it plays on every mother's deepest fear'
Annabel Kantaria
`Among my favourite books of the year. I loved it'
Mark Hill
`Prepare to whizz through this addictive read... edge-of-your-seat stuff'
The Sun
`A stimulating, powerful, entirely captivating and deliciously entertaining read'
Liz Robinson, Lovereading
`I was totally blown away'
Crime Book Junkie
`I actually thought within the first few chapters, that I had it sussed and knew exactly who did what and why - I was wrong'
A Cornish Mum
`I was addicted'
Mumsnet
Mel McGrath is an Essex girl, the author of the critically acclaimed and bestselling family memoir Silvertown. She won the John Llewellyn-Rhys/Mil on Sunday award for Best Writer Under 35 for her first book, Motel Nirvana. She has published three Arctic mysteries featuring the Inuit detective Edie Kiglatuk under the name MJ McGrath, the first of which, The Boy in the Snow, was shortlisted for a CWA Gold Dagger.
In the last year she has been one of the founders and moving lights of the website Killer Women, which has rapidly established itself as one of the key forums for crime writing in the UK.