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  • Published: 8 January 2019
  • ISBN: 9781473568822
  • Imprint: Cornerstone Digital
  • Format: EBook
  • Pages: 96

The Guy Who Died Twice



D.D. Warren was pretty sure she'd seen it all...until the case of the guy who died twice

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Detective D.D. Warren confronts her strangest case yet in this exclusive eBook short story by international bestselling author LISA GARDNER.

D.D. Warren thought she'd seen it all.

Then a man walks into police headquarters, desperately trying to explain that he's dead.

Sent on his way by baffled detectives, the man turns up again a few hours later. Except this time, he is dead.

It falls to D.D. Warren to find out how – and why – this guy died… twice.

Contains an exclusive early extract of Lisa Gardner's next gripping thriller, Never Tell.

  • Published: 8 January 2019
  • ISBN: 9781473568822
  • Imprint: Cornerstone Digital
  • Format: EBook
  • Pages: 96

About the author

Lisa Gardner

Lisa Gardner started her writing career aged seventeen. Having caught her hair on fire while working in food service, crafting a novel seemed a safer bet. A mere ten years later she became an overnight success with the publication of her first thriller, The Perfect Husband.

Now an internationally bestselling author and winner of the International Thriller Writers Award for best suspense novel, Lisa lives in the mountains of New Hampshire with her family.

When not glued to her computer, she can be found hiking the mountains with her dogs and/or researching new and interesting ways to get away with murder.

Also by Lisa Gardner

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Praise for The Guy Who Died Twice

In an audacious twist, Alma Katsu has made something new and suspenseful from the legendary story of the Donner Party. The Hunger is filled with terror, pity, and grue.

KEITH DONOHUE, author of The Boy Who Drew Monsters

A terrific historical novel with a thrilling, bloody twist. Alma Katsu's brilliant reimagining of the Donner Party's fate is rich with character, laden with imminent doom, and propelled by chilling mystery. A novel that book clubs and dark fiction fans should devour with equal relish.

CHRISTOPHER GOLDEN, author of Ararat

Alma Katsu has taken one of the darkest and most chilling episodes in our history, and made the story even darker, even more terrifying. I swear I'm still shuddering. A fantastic read!

R. L. STINE, author of Goosebumps and Fear Street

Beautiful, lyrical, utterly grounded in the land, and the people, this is the best - and scariest - story I've read this year.

MANDA SCOTT, author of Boudica and Into the Fire

The Hunger is a bold and brilliant novel, heavy with foreboding and dread, and with a rich vein of humanity at its core. I challenge you to read it without experiencing your own hunger pangs.

TIM LEBBON, author of The Silence

If you think the story of the Donner Party can't get more horrific, think again. In this gripping, atmospheric reimagining of that dark tale, Katsu has created a deeply unsettling and truly terrifying masterpiece.

JENNIFER McMAHON, author of The Winter People and Burntown

Uneasy, nauseous, slow-burning tale that marries historical fiction with a hint of the supernatural. Great detailing; colourful characterization; some supremely ominous stuff, but always reined in at the final moment to rack up the tension even more. Loved it!

JOANNE HARRIS, author of Chocolat

Like The Revenant but with an insistent supernatural whisper. The setting and the story are utterly chilling. And the telling of it is so well done.

SARAH PINBOROUGH, author of Behind Her Eyes

A riveting drama of power struggles and shifting alliances . . . the tensions [Katsu] creates are thrilling.

KIRKUS REVIEWS

Katsu injects the supernatural into this brilliant retelling of the ill-fated Donner Party . . . fans of Dan Simmons's The Terror will find familiar and welcome chills.

PUBLISHERS WEEKLY (starred review)

Deeply, deeply disturbing.

STEPHEN KING

An absorbing thriller that had me digging into the history behind this tale as soon as I'd read the last page . . . Her descriptions of the land are movingly beautiful, but there is danger even here.

Alison Flood, OBSERVER 'Thrillers of the Month'

Katsu adds a rich vein of horror to her imaginative retelling . . . astonishingly atmospheric, with a strong sense of claustrophobia, despite the vast prairies and mountains . . . this is an enthralling and chilling read.

Laura Wilson, GUARDIAN

The Revenant by way of The Walking Dead and it works.

Paul Connolly, METRO

The story she writes of human failings and despair is so powerful and so well written . . . Her account of the pioneers' dawning realisation that pressing on, staying still and turning back all mean death is hauntingly good.

Antonia Senior, THE TIMES

Alma Katsu's accomplished, engrossing novel weaves a cocoon of supernatural horror around historical tragedy . . . it is a beautifully intense read.

James Lovegrove, FINANCIAL TIMES

This . . . is supernatural suspense at its finest. It is strangely ethereal, yet gritty, with one eye on the distant skyline and the other on the bloody journey. If historical novels are your thing, The Hunger delivers a believable, fully realized 19th-century America. But the best thing about The Hunger is that it will scare the pants off you.

Danielle Trussoni, NEW YORK TIMES