Something Might Happen

Something Might Happen

by JulieMyerson (Author)

Synopsis

On a Monday night in October in a small seaside town in Suffolk, a woman is brutally murdered. There are no obvious suspects, she was not an obvious victim. She just wasn't, thinks her grieving, bewildered friend Tess, the type to have something happen to her. Something Might Happen is not a murder mystery. There are clues, false trails, detectives, all the paraphernalia of the whodunnit, but Myerson's concern is with the effect of the murder on an ordinary community and specifically on Tess herself, her husband Mick and her three children. As the police go about their routine investigation, Tess's world of nappies, school runs and baked beans begins to unravel. Suddenly nothing is certain, the mundane becomes charged with significance, established relationships begin to crumble and places that once were safe are safe no longer.

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 336
Edition: 1st Vintage Book Edition
Publisher: Vintage
Published: 06 May 2004

ISBN 10: 0099453525
ISBN 13: 9780099453529
Book Overview: 'Chillingly convincing - Myerson leaves us teetering emotionally at the edge of the cliff, without a safety net' Independent

Media Reviews
Summer reading may never be the same after Julie Myerson's latest novel...Myerson has a talent for making the unthinkable readable. The result is riveting * Observer *
Electrifying * Financial Times *
This is top-notch storytelling - it doesn't let go and keeps you thinking * Daily Mail *
This novel stands as her most impressively realised work to date...Myerson has a forensic interest in the messiness of grief, which she itemises with the awful clarity of vision that often accompanies shock * Guardian *
Mesmerising, chilling stuff; Myerson's prose is taut and precise * Sunday Times *
Author Bio
Julie Myerson is the author of Home: The Story of Everyone Who Ever Lived in Our House and nine novels, including the best-selling Something Might Happen, which was longlisted for the Booker Prize. In the words of the Observer, she 'has a talent for making the unthinkable readable. The results are riveting.'