Why a Booktrail?
2000s: You call someone for help, but can you always trust that voice on the phone?
2000s: You call someone for help, but can you always trust that voice on the phone?
The people who call End of the Line need hope. They need reassurance that life is worth living. But some are unlucky enough to get through to Laura. Laura doesn’t want them to hope. She wants them to die.
Laura hasn’t had it easy: she’s survived sickness and a difficult marriage only to find herself heading for forty, unsettled and angry. She doesn’t love talking to people worse off than she is. She craves it.
But now someone’s on to her—Ryan, whose world falls apart when his pregnant wife ends her life, hand in hand with a stranger. Who was this man, and why did they choose to die together?
The sinister truth is within Ryan’s grasp, but he has no idea of the desperate lengths Laura will go to…
Because the best thing about being a Good Samaritan is that you can get away with murder.
There is a very sad setting in this book since Beachy Head and the site around Birling Gap is a well known suicide spot. It’s also a spot of real beauty however with its stunning scenery and view of the sea
“Birling Gap in East Sussex, was part of the Seven Sisters coastline, with panoramic views of the English Channel” Birling Gap is not known as a suicide spot so Ryan questions why this is the crime scene in the book and not the obvious one.
Destination : Northampton, Sussex Author/Guide:by John Marrs Departure Time: 2000s
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