When TV star Suzannah Piper is killed in a tragic car accident, many publicly grieve but few genuinely mourn. But investigative journalist Lucy Strong mourns. When Lucy first arrived in London, it was Suzannah who helped her realize her dream. But as Lucy starts to uncover the secret life that Suzannah kept even from her, she realizes that her friend was playing a dangerous game, and soon her own life is under threat. . .
I was surprised to find that Esther Rantzen has written a book. I found this one in a charity shop and quickly grabbed it to read. The premise of the story is that Suzannah Piper a tv star is killed . Lucy String an investigative reporter who knew her well , realises that it was murder not an accident . Her life then becomes in danger as she discovers that Suzannah had a secret life that nobody knew about. It's been a slow read , but Lucy has been a good character . The culprit was a surprise for me , a 4 ⭐️ read .
This book is billed as a thriller and a whodunit and fails miserably on both counts. There is no mystery as to what happened to Suzannah Piper, the heroine doesn't even bother to investigate what went on and only blindly discovers what happened in the last 100 pages, - no detective work - nothing. As a thriller there is no suspense, no twists - nothing. The characters are all fairly two dimensional, often a requisite of whodunnits so they can be used as suspects except the author doesn't have any suspects here. All you are left with are cardboard cutouts. The main character Lucy Strong is self-obsessed and has no empathy with any of the other characters, only considers her own feelings. She also moans about being a 'celebrity' but then happily uses her 'celebrity' to further her own career. There is real hypocrisy here which only makes the heroine extremely un-sympathetic. The title is also rubbish, what exactly was Susannah Piper's Secret Life. All Lucy discovers is that some people didn't like her as she slept around and could be a tough boss. This is NOTHING that the heroine didn't already know at the beginning of the book. To top it all this isn't even well written. Scenes run into one another. it's not even clear over what kind of timeframe the book takes place, or even at times what day it's supposed to be. Sloppy. Where was the editor in all this? As for being an expose of the TV industry, well it didn't tell me anything I couldn't have gleaned from a tabloid newspaper. Honestly this is bad. A really blatant case of publisher signing a famous name in the hope of selling some books.