![]() ![]() She puts it down to an unfortunate coincidence. She confides in her friend, Melissa, who tells her not to worry about it. When Zoe gets home, she can’t get the disturbing photograph out of her mind. Beside a row of unsavory personal adds is her photograph with a website address, “.” As she browses the evening newspaper to pass the time, she stumbles across the classifieds section. One day, Zoe gets a seat on the train, a rare treat for her since it’s usually standing room only. ![]() Zoe is wrong someone is always watching her. She takes the same route to work every day and faces the same overcrowded platforms every morning for her commute, thinking that no one notices her in the crowd. She hates her job, but it pays the bills, and she has two teenagers to bring up. The protagonist, Zoe Walker, is a forty-something divorcee who works as a bookkeeper in central London. Her experience working in the police force informs her novels. Aside from writing thrillers and crime novels, Mackintosh supports mothers who experience medical complications during pregnancy. ![]() The fastest-selling title by a new crime writer in 2015, the novel is available in more than thirty languages. ![]() Winner of the 2017 Richard and Judy Summer Book Club, Clare Mackintosh’s I See You (2017), a thriller with a heavy emphasis on criminal procedure, follows what happens when a young woman sees her photo in a newspaper “classifieds” section, with no explanation for why it is there. ![]()
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