Scottish Daily Mail

PSYCHO THRILLERS

CHRISTENA APPLEYARD

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THE FAVOUR by Laura Vaughan (Corvus £14.99, 336 pp)

It Is always risky to write a book with no likeable characters, but this one is a treat because of the excellent insights it offers into the lives of a group of wealthy, ghastly, entitled young people known as the Dilettante.

eighteen-year-old Ada howell is not rich, but she is desperatel­y trying to get in with this dreadful crowd while she is on a glitzy art history trip to Venice, funded by her godmother. When a tragedy occurs, Ada’s coldbloode­d opportunis­m kicks in and she sees a chance to advance her social climbing into a future life of privilege. But it’s a gamble with dangerous and chilling consequenc­es.

the storyline isn’t evenly paced, but the slower parts are saved by Vaughan’s elegant prose, which in turn is underpinne­d by an obviously detailed knowledge of fine art, Venice and horrible people.

THE DARE by Lesley Kara (Bantam £12.99, 304 pp)

LIzzIe and Alice are 13-yearold best friends who go for a country walk — but only one returns alive.

the survivor is Lizzie, who has epilepsy. she starts a furious argument when Alice admits she is keeping an important secret from her. In the middle of the argument, Lizzie has a fit and comes round to discover that Alice has been killed in a horrific train accident and she has no recollecti­on of what happened.

At the time, Alice’s family don’t believe Lizzie isn’t somehow involved in the death. And, although Lizzie never really recovers from the loss, we meet her 12 years later, finally on the verge of happiness with her engagement to a local GP. When Alice’s older sister suddenly appears working as a nurse in Lizzie’s fiance’s surgery, she has to face old memories and new dangers. It’s a plot packed with surprises, and it has an ending that won’t disappoint.

THE HIDING PLACE by Jenny Quintana (Mantle £14.99, 320 pp)

thIs story is told from the twin perspectiv­es of Connie, a pregnant teenage mother in 1964, and, in 1992, her daughter Marina, who was abandoned by Connie and adopted.

the grown-up Marina has now moved into a flat at 24 harrington Gardens — the London residence where she was abandoned as a baby — in an attempt to find out what happened to her mother and why she left her. Marina hopes that living there and meeting the other residents will give her the answers to her past.

tension comes from the skilful zeroing in and out of Connie’s sad story and Marina’s desperatio­n for a happy ending.

Using the house as the key to the mystery is a clever way of reflecting the different historical attitudes of people then and now.

Eric Burdon: Rock ’n’ Roll — Animal, 10pm, BBC4

PROFILE of the front man of British Invasion trailblaze­rs The Animals. Burdon spends much of it behind sunglasses, and recalls how his introducti­on to the rock ’n’ roll lifestyle came early: he was taken backstage at a Louis Armstrong concert in Newcastle when he was around nine or ten.

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