I have to admit that I have strayed from the sequels and series path for the book I have just finished. I purchased it a while ago following an interesting review of it on BBC Radio 4. As a bit of time had passed since then, I embarked upon this book, not quite remembering what it was about, but as it was being narrated by Juliet Stephenson, I knew I couldn't got too far wrong. And I was not disappointed. Apple Tree Yard by Louise Doughty opens with our central character sitting in the dock, but we don't, as yet, know why. She is being questioned and she seems quietly confident that she will soon be free again until three little words send her into a spin ... and those words are Apple Tree Yard! At which point, we are taken on the journey that got us to this point. The narrator, Yvonne Carmichael, speaks directly to the reader and I don't know whether it was because I was reading the audio edition, but a very intimate atmosphere was created which added hugely to the tale. Yvonne is a geneticist of note, with a beautiful home and a successful marriage. Things are ticking along nicely when she has a chance meeting with a stranger and suddenly finds herself in the midst of a passionate and dangerous affair with a man who is full of mystery. The way he talks, acts and gets her to act, leads Yvonne to believe him to be a spy, which adds to the excitement. She manages to keep her two lives very separate until a work colleague hints that he knows what she is up to and then brutally assaults her. After this, her life slowly unravels and leads her to where we started the book - in the dock. This is a taut thriller, full of surprises, twists and turns. It is refreshing for a book to have a 52-year-old woman take centre stage and while it is not always easy to like her, you cannot help but care about what happens to her. This book pulls no punches in the feelings and actions that can be raised by lust, love and fear. There are adult themes and this is definitely a grown up book. Intriguing and infuriating in equal measure, it is definitely a book I can recommend.
My STAR rating: FOUR.
Length: 448 print pages.
Price I paid: £7.99.
Formats available: print; unabridged audio download; ebook.
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