Thursdays Children, Nicci French
Thursdays Children, Nicci French
1 Rating(s)
List: $20.00 | Sale: $14.00
Club: $10.00

Thursday's Children
A Frieda Klein Mystery

Author: Nicci French

Narrator: Beth Chalmers

Unabridged: 11 hr 9 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Publisher: Penguin Audio

Published: 03/29/2016


Synopsis

“Fierce, fascinating and full of insight, Frieda Klein is irresistible.”—Val McDermid, bestselling author of Splinter the Silence

The electrifying fourth book in the internationally bestselling Frieda Klein Mystery series

Frieda Klein is uninterested in catching up on old times when her former classmate, Maddie Capel, shows up at her door—until she hears about Maddie’s troubled daughter, Becky. The teenager claims she was raped in her own bed one night while her mother was downstairs. Her assailant left her with a warning: “Don’t think of telling anyone, sweetheart. Nobody will believe you.” And no one does—except Frieda.
 
Becky’s story awakens dark memories of an eerily similar incident in Frieda’s own past that she’s been avoiding for decades. When Becky is found hanging from a beam in her bedroom, Frieda returns home, seeking out her old high school friends to ask what they remember about the night that prompted Frieda to leave town for good. But confronting the ghosts of the past turns out to be more dangerous than she ever expected. 

About The Author

NICCI FRENCH is the pseudonym for the internationally bestselling writing partnership of suspense writers Nicci Gerrard and Sean French. They are married and live in Suffolk and London, England.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Stefano on April 26, 2014

I am a huge Nicci French fan and I have thoroughly enjoyed the Frieda Klein series... so far. I found this particular installment quite disappointing. Nicci French has always played with the boundaries of realism and verisimilitude, but in this case I feel they streched our "willing suspension of di......more

Goodreads review by Emma on August 24, 2018

I think I’m done with this series. Frida Klein is not a character I can take to. She is intensely annoying. She’s cold. I don’t understand how she keeps the friends she has. I completely empathise with the people who don’t like her. She behaves in a ridiculous way, with no regard for her own health......more

Goodreads review by Erin on December 05, 2019

4.5. 1 of my favorite series of all time! (Just please start at the beginning!)......more

Goodreads review by Malia on August 28, 2017

This is the fourth installment in the Frieda Klein mysteries series, and unfortunately one I found a bit on the weak side. The story is engaging, and I found it interesting enough, but my issue was with Frieda as a protagonist. She was always very cold (which makes me think being a therapist is not......more


Quotes

Praise for THURSDAY'S CHILDREN:

“You'll ache for Frieda as she tears open old wounds and cheer when she finally shows signs of healing from her lacerations.”—Kirkus Reviews (starred review)

“This visceral read tackles a sensitive subject with empathy, anger, and grace. A skillfully woven plot and deftly drawn characters complement the central mystery, which engages and satisfies while developing the series arc.” Publishers Weekly (starred review)

"Complex psychological suspense at its best." —Booklist (starred review)

“Fierce, fascinating and full of insight, Frieda Klein is irresistible.” —Val McDermid, bestselling author of Splinter the Silence

Praise for books in the Frieda Klein Mystery Series: 

"Complex and flawed, Frieda Klein is a refreshingly human protagonist, an intriguing debut for a truly unique character."--Tami Hoag, bestselling author of Down the Darkest Road

"A neat puzzle with a satisfying resolution and a terrific twist at the end."--The New York Times Book Review

"Fast-paced and spooky...it leaves readers with the promise of intriguing tales to come."--People (starred review)

"Skillfully balances on a barely-there thread of a tightrope, straddling police procedural-psychological suspense territory while keeping its protagonist utterly human, flaws and all."--The Boston Globe