Publisher's Synopsis
<p><b><i>A Window Breaks</i></b><b> is the nerve-shredding thriller from C. M. Ewan, the author of <i>Safe House</i>.</b><br><br><b>‘Fantastic’ – Lee Child</b><br><b>‘</b><b>Totally addictive</b><b>’ –</b> <b>Ann Cleeves</b><br><b>‘</b><b>A thrill-a-minute page-turner</b><b>’ –</b> <b>Simon Kernick</b><br><br><b>They were supposed to be getting away from their troubles . . .</b><br><br>Still recovering from their son’s death eight months earlier, Tom and Rachel Sullivan take their daughter to a remote Scottish lodge in the hope that spending time together will begin to heal the rifts between them.<br><br>But at 2 a.m. on their first night, downstairs a window breaks.<br><br>Someone is inside their holiday home, intent on causing them harm.<br><br>They don’t know why they have been targeted and, with nowhere to run, their choices are limited.<br><br>With only each other to rely on, can they escape?<br><br><br><b>What authors are saying . . .</b><br><br>‘If you only read one thriller this year <b>read this</b>’ – C. L. Taylor<br><br>‘Smashed my way through this . . . <b>Nerve-shredding</b>’ – Tim Weaver<br><br>‘Brilliantly crafted, <b>excruciatingly tense</b>’ – Sharon Bolton<br><br>‘Starts at <b>full throttle </b>and never lets up’ – T. M. Logan<br><br>‘<b>Heart-stopping</b> . . . a sure-fire bestseller’ – Jo Spain<br><br>‘<b>Breakneck ride</b> of a thriller’ – Fiona Cummins<br><br>‘Almost unbearably <b>tense and exciting</b>’ – Mark Edwards<br><br>‘Fierce read, with heart, muscle and an <b>out-of-sight twist</b>’ – Mick Herron<br><br>‘Tense, <b>fast-paced thriller</b>’ – Jenny Quintana<br><br>‘Brilliant and almost <b>impossible to put down</b>’ – Andrew Taylor<br><br><br><b>What readers are saying . . .</b><br><br>‘This was so<b> intense as the twists and turns</b> came one after another at breakneck speed.’<br><br>‘<b>Brilliantly written</b> thriller which keeps you gripped from the first few pages.’<br><br>‘Full of <b>action and excitement</b>’<br><br>‘<b>Absolutely amazing</b>; I was totally gripped from start to finish’</p>