The haunting new thriller from the Sunday Times bestselling author of The Chalk Man.
C. J. Tudor was born in Salisbury and grew up in Nottingham, where she still lives with her partner and young daughter. Her love of writing, especially the dark and macabre, started young. When her peers were reading Judy Blume, she was devouring Stephen King and James Herbert. Over the years she has had a variety of jobs, including trainee reporter, radio scriptwriter, dog walker, voiceover artist, television presenter, copywriter and, now, author. Her first novel, The Chalk Man, was a Sunday Times bestseller and sold in thirty-nine territories.
Some writers have it, and some don't. C. J. Tudor has it big time .
. . The Taking of Annie Thorne is terrific in every way
*Lee Child*
Confirms Tudor as Britain's female Stephen King. There is a
creeping dread on every page and, as you start a new chapter, a
dark shadow over your shoulder. Tudor's punk prose style and her
great eye for menace make this a book no one should read at
night.
*Daily Mail*
There is no sign of second-album syndrome: the mix of grotty
provincial realism and amateur cold-case sleuthing works just as
well here
*The Sunday Times*
As enjoyable and well written as her first, The Chalk Man
*Daily Mirror*
Dark, gothic and utterly compelling, The Taking of Annie Thorne
pulls off a rare combination - an atmosphere of unsettling evil
along with richly nuanced characterisation
*J. P. Delaney, bestselling author of The Girl Before*
Tudor's 2018 The Chalk Man was a standout mystery novel with a
fresh voice and a spooky plot. This is even better
*Washington Post*
Shows that her excellent The Chalk Man was no one-off in matching
Stephen King for creepiness
*Sunday Express's Bestseller Predictions 2019*
From the author of The Chalk Man comes an equally creepy story
about missing children
*Woman & Home*
Spine-tingling
*Sunday Post*
Spine tinglingly good
*Amy Lloyd, bestselling author of The Innocent Wife*
The Taking of Annie Thorne deserves every plaudit it receives
*Richard Armitage, narrator of The Taking of Annie Thorne and star
of The Hobbit*
I loved everything about this book
*Alice Feeney, author of Sometimes I Lie*
So dark, so dastardly, so incredible. Still pondering this one,
it's just that disturbing. C. J. Tudor has done it again.
Bravo!
*Samantha Downing, author of My Lovely Wife*
A can't-put-it-down thriller if ever I met one. I loved The Chalk
Man and this is equally as fabulous. The Taking of Annie Thorne by
lead head-rattler C. J. Tudor!
*Joanna Cannon, bestselling author of The Trouble with Goats and
Sheep*
Deliciously creepy, impeccably plotted and laced with both wicked
humor and genuine shocks, The Taking of Annie Thorne is the kind of
read-under-the-covers thriller you didn't think people wrote
anymore. Lucky for us, C. J. Tudor still does. An absolute corker
of a book
*Riley Sager, New York Times bestselling author of Final Girls and
The Last Time I Lied*
Dark and creeping and utterly unpredictable, The Taking of Annie
Thorne is another triumph of a novel by C J Tudor. With its
compelling characters and witty writing, it grips from the very
first page
*Jenny Quintana, author of The Missing Girl*
Gripping and dark, The Taking of Annie Thorne descends like its
very own mine shaft, getting creepier the further you go. You'll
race to the finish
*Our Little Secret*
With shades of Pet Sematary and an all-round aura of creepiness,
The Taking of Annie Thorne cements C. J. Tudor's position as a
major new talent at the dark heart of crime writing. Her characters
are compelling, the village of Arnhill as atmospheric as its
abandoned pit, and she possesses that rare ability to keep the
reader turning the pages, desperate to discover what happens next.
Brilliant
*Fiona Cummins, author of Rattle*
If you found your pulse racing as you read Tudor's previous book,
you won't be disappointed in The Taking of Annie Thorne, another
spooky, sinister slice of tension
*Wiltshire Living*
Delicious in every way. A deliciously creepy story, deliciously
told. Storytelling like a siren's song: your hair will prickle and
stand on end but you won't be able to tear your eyes from the page.
If you like Tana French, you will love, love, love C. J. Tudor
*Alma Katsu*
Razor-sharp writing and masterful plotting drive this dark story
about a small town, buried secrets, and ghosts from the past. Witty
and compelling all at once, The Taking of Annie Thorne is a must
read page-turner
*All is Not Forgotten*
WOW WOW WOW! C. J. Tudor's follow-up to her impressive debut is
superbly chilling and delightfully creepy. Smartly written and
brilliantly plotted, here is a book that crawls under your skin and
hooks on until you reach that jaw-dropping ending
*C. J. Cooke, author of I Know My Name*
C. J. Tudor has proven that she is the true master at creating
perfectly dark, highly propulsive, and tightly coiled mysteries
that are utterly impossible to put down. From page one, the reader
is pulled in, in a gathering sense of dread, and taken on an
addictive, thrilling ride to the very last page
*Aimee Molloy, New York Times Bestselling author of The Perfect
Mother*
C. J. Tudor nails it again with this clever, disturbing novel where
the scars of an old mining community are opened by a slash of cold
murder. From the shocking opening to the explosive finale, The
Taking of Annie Thorne is a chilling page-turner that will leave
you checking the locks at night. Brilliant
*Olivia Kiernan, author of Too Close to Breathe*
I loved it. The quality of her writing meant it was an absolute
pleasure to read, as well as being genuinely terrifying. It made my
hair stand on end! Genius
*Emma Curtis author of One Little Mistake*
C. J. Tudor writes evil with aplomb - The Taking of Annie Thorne
reveals how evil casts its resonance through places, people and our
shared past. This book lingers with you long after the lights go
out
*Matt Wesolowski, author of Six Stories*
What an absolute treat of a novel this was. Such an assured,
distinct voice and an absolute belter of a plot
*Caz Frear, author of Sweet Little Lies*
I rattled through The Taking of Annie Thorne by C. J. Tudor - it
reads like a Stephen King novel, and I can't think of a higher
compliment than that!
*Simon Lelic*
Deliciously creepy, and written with such skill and fluency it's
hard to believe this is only her second book. Indeed I think it
gives King a run for his money
*James Oswald, bestselling author of the Inspector McLean
series*
C. J. Tudor is a writer of real creepiness. The Taking of Annie
Thorne is no exception - a dark, chilling mystery that had me
reading until the early hours
*Kate Hamer, The Girl in the Red Coat*
I read this novel with a sense of creeping dread. It was an
achingly good, well-plotted, dark, disturbing piece of pure
brilliance! C J Tudor is my new favourite author.
*Sam Carrington, bestselling author of Bad Sister and One Little
Lie*
Loved this. Funny, frightening, goes out with a BANG. Believe the
hype!
*Chris Whitaker, author of Tall Oaks*
A brilliantly sharp and distinctive voice and super-creepy plot.
Fab
*Roz Watkins, author of The Devil's Dice*
Finished this creepy corker last night. Utterly compelling with a
host of intriguing characters and brilliant writing. Fans of The
Chalk Man will definitely not be disappointed
*Isabelle Broom, author of One Thousand Stars and You*
I loved The Chalk Man, but The Taking of Annie Thorne is even
better, creepier and more addictive! I was so creeped out I had to
stop reading until my husband came home one night! Brilliant stuff
- well done, C. J. Tudor!
*Elle Croft, author of The Other Sister*
The Hot List
*Inside Soap*
Following on from C J Tudor's successful debut, comes a novel about
bullying, cruelty and deceit. . . Tudor keeps the novel moving at a
fast pace
*Literary Review*
A Stephen King style thriller that will have you transfixed and
submerged in the entanglement of the twisting plot. This book kept
me intrigued all the way to the very end
*Places & Faces*
Crime meets psychological suspense meets out-and-out horror. From
the stomach-churning first chapter to the grand guignol ending that
is as shocking as it is surprising, Tudor racks up the nastiness .
. . Another hit.
*Buzz Magazine*
Matches Stephen King for creepiness. A must-read for horror
fans
*Leamington Courier*
Creepy beyond words. Just like Stephen King, the fact that Tudor's
characters are so believable makes the events even creepier
*People's Friend*
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