Trust No One

I Am Pilgrim meets Orphan X in TRUST NO ONE, a high-concept read that grips and entertains like a Hollywood thriller

THEY FOUND HER WHEN SHE WAS TEN.

Locked in a sensory-deprivation tank. Trapped for days in the dark. Listening to the same message over and over: 'My name is Sara Eden. My name is Sara Eden.

Her memory gone, this is all Sara knows about herself.

There were a handful of clues. A battered necklace. A few scraps of paper. And a polaroid of a stranger with a handwritten note: 'Don't trust this man'.

Now an adult, Sara knows a few more things.

That the government agents pursuing her will never stop. And that the only path to her identity is to find the man she must not trust. But there is something else in Sara's past that is more dangerous, more deadly, than her pursuers. And the only thing she knows for certain is that she must

TRUST NO ONE

Furiously paced, there is nothing derivative about this debut. A young girl is locked in a sensory derivation tank; years later she begins to piece together the fragments of her past. The action that follows is cleverly inspired by a real-life figure, Helen Duncan, a Scottish medium who came to the attention of Winston Churchill during the Second World War

Observer

About Anthony Mosawi

Anthony Mosawi moved from London to California to join Paramount Pictures as an executive. He was on the Paramount lot for seven years before launching his own film financing company. He is married with a son and daughter, and splits his time between LA and London. Trust No One was his first novel, with heroine Sara Eden reappearing in his page-turning second novel, In Harm's Way.
Details
  • Imprint: Penguin
  • ISBN: 9780718186388
  • Length: 384 pages
  • Dimensions: 198mm x 23mm x 129mm
  • Weight: 266g
  • Price: £7.99
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