The Flower Girls

· Bloomsbury Publishing
4.6
8 reviews
Ebook
352
Pages
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About this ebook

'A dark, disturbing and all-consuming mystery' SUN

'I couldn't put it down' SOPHIE HANNAH


'Clever and twisty' OBSERVER


The Flower Girls are about to hit the headlines all over again...

It's been nineteen years since ten-year-old Laurel was given a life sentence and six-year-old Rosie was given a new identity.

The sisters were the very picture of innocence: two little girls who loved to listen to their mother's bedtime stories and play make-believe in the garden. But then an act of unparalleled horror tears their family apart, leaving Laurel behind bars.

Neither sister has laid eyes on the other since then, during which time their lives have followed very different paths. But now – with Laurel coming up for parole – they look set to be reunited in court, and the world will be watching...


'Chilling, atmospheric and incredibly compelling' WILL DEAN

'Enjoyably twisty ... with a killer ending' i

Ratings and reviews

4.6
8 reviews
Midge Odonnell
January 19, 2019
This is a very well written book that explores both the nature of family but also the nature of obsession. Dealing not only with the murder of a child but the disappearence of another, the aftermath for the parents of said children and the aftermath for the family of the accused. It also explores the intrusiveness of the media and how events are manipulated and twisted by them to sell the most copy or get the most clicks. Although I had more or less figured out by half way through the book the reality of the history behind The Flower Girls, this did not effect my enjoyment of the latter half. It may even have increased it as I was able to pick up on all the little clues scattered throughout that pointed the reader in the right direction. The only real puzzle becomes who abducted the 5 year old from the Balcombe or did she just wander off as her parents asserted? The reveal when it comes actually shocked me and was not where I expected things to go with that story thread. The characterisation throughout is strong. Even Joanna (who I found to be irritating beyond belief) is so well constructed as the Aunt of the murdered toddler that she lives and breathes between the pages. Laurel is particularly complex and you are left with the feeling that you have not even scraped the surface of this damaged soul. Rosie Bowman may have rebranded herself as Hazel Archer to escape her "notorious past" but as things start to fall apart around her you start to see the 6 year old peeping back through, the way the author handles this is wonderfully nuanced and you do get sucked in by the character. Plotting is strong and well paced. Although it follows some tried and tested thematic schemes it always manages to feel fresh and you do find yourself hurrying through Max's thoughts to get to the next section from Joanna's perspective or Hazel's or Laurel's and then having to go back and force yourself to slow down a little to take in every little bit of it. Each character exists for a reason of the plot but so unobtrusively and naturally that nobody feels like padding. There are truly chilling moments in this book which, for me, were not really related to the murder of 2 year old Kirstie Swann. They were definitely based around the psychologies of those involved and tended to be almost throw away moments in the text when Laurel or Hazel/Rosie was remembering things from their childhood. Maybe the best exponent of this was when Hazel is reciting her internal that what is happening is real and not make believe. For me this was a summation of the book itself, just one little sentence and yet it encapsulated all that was going on here. This is an exciting novel that will have you suffering from the "one more chapter" curse. So, why not 5 stars if I loved it so much? It is such a small thing but I did become wearied of both the insistence on referring to a toddler as a baby, in fact the constant use of the word baby began to grate immeasurably and I also found some of the assumptions made in the original case to be leaps of faith that were never tested at the time or on appeal and were almost glossed over. The main one being the judges assertion of being exposed to violent imagery being to blame, there also is a troubling lack of professional support given to Laurel throughout her incarceration which I find hard to believe would be the case for one incarcerated so young for such a heinous crime. For once a novel that is touted as being a Psychological Thriller actually steps up to the plate and delivers. THIS IS AN HONEST AND UNBIASED REVIEW OF A FREE COPY OF THIS BOOK RECEIVED VIA THE PIGEONHOLE.
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Grace J. Reviewerlady
January 17, 2019
Never has a book been better classed by genre; this is a most thrilling read, full of suspense which - ultimately - chilled me to the bone! Sisters Laurel and Rosie are inseparable. During the long hot summer they play mostly in the garden of their middle-class home, but with their mother's permission they are allowed to go to the nearby play park via the path from their back garden gate. One day in 1997 they return home, as usual, skipping and laughing - but they have left behind them absolute mayhem and a missing toddler. This is a very skilfully written novel - easy to read and rather enjoyable! Intriguing, mesmerising and astounding - yet totally believable - this story is told both in present time and in the past with events drawing the reader in, making them really care about what happened then and what is happening now. I found myself really invested in all the characters, and I was absolutely certain I had it all worked out. Did I? Will you? Well, you have to read it yourself to find out but I have to admit to feeling more shocked than I have at any other book for a long, long time. My thanks to publisher Bloomsbury for my copy via NetGalley. This is my honest, original and unbiased review.
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Josephina Ballerina
February 4, 2019
Incredibly compelling, and a little unsettling.
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About the author

Alice Clark-Platts is a former human rights lawyer who worked at the UN International Criminal Tribunal. She is the author of the police procedurals Bitter Fruits and The Taken, the latter of which was shortlisted for the Best Police Procedural in the Dead Good Reader Awards 2017.

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