Anna O

Matthew Blake

Book - 2024

"The world will know her name. The average person spends 33 years of their life asleep. But, in this mysterious shadow world, how can we ever know who we really become? In 2019, Anna Ogilvy was a budding twenty-five-year-old writer with a bright future ahead of her. Then, one night, she stabbed two people to death with no apparent motive and hasn’t woken up since. Her deep sleep is known by neurologists as ‘resignation syndrome’, a rare functional psychosomatic disorder. The tabloid press dubs her ‘Sleeping Beauty’. Fast forward to the present day. Dr Benedict Prince is a forensic psychologist and an expert in the field of sleep-related homicides. As a consultant at The Abbey, a sleep clinic based in London’s infamous Harle...y Street, he has studied patients who are held on murder charges; but they have no memory of their crimes. As Anna shows the first signs of stirring, Benedict must determine what really happened that night and whether or not she should be held criminally responsible for her actions when she finally wakes up. Only she knows the truth about that night, but only he knows how to discover it."--

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FICTION/Blake Matthew
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Location Call Number   Status
1st Floor New Shelf FICTION/Blake Matthew (NEW SHELF) Due Jul 2, 2024
Subjects
Genres
Novels
Detective and mystery fiction
Published
Toronto : HarperCollins Publishers Ltd 2024.
Language
English
Main Author
Matthew Blake (author)
Physical Description
pages cm
Issued also in electronic format
ISBN
9781443470155
9781443470162
9780063314153
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

At a remote cottage, Anna sends a WhatsApp message: "I'm sorry. I think I've killed them." But when authorities arrive to question Anna and attempt to save two stabbing victims, the woman is fast asleep, a state in which she will remain for years. Did she commit the murders while sleepwalking? Is she actually asleep or is this a years-long ruse? When she begins to stir four years later, Ben Prince, a psychologist specializing in sleep-related crime, rushes to her bedside, hoping to uncover Anna's secrets. Flashing back to Anna's journal before the murders, delving into the lives of Anna's nurse, and giving glimpses of the media fervor attendant to this interesting case, first-time novelist Blake offers many elements that will appeal to readers who prefer their psychological thrillers extra twisty with an innovative premise. Unfortunately, even though Blake alternates perspectives, the voices for his varied characters lack differentiation and he leans on explanations after the fact rather than creating on-page action. A heavy marketing push and comparisons to favorites like Gillian Flynn and Paula Hawkins will nonetheless draw many readers.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Former political speech writer Blake debuts with a devilishly twisty psychological thriller about a woman accused of killing her best friends and then falling into a deep sleep. Forensic psychologist Benedict Prince specializes in sleep-related crimes, studying instances of reckless driving, murder, and robbery committed while the perpetrators were asleep. His article on a possible cure for "resignation syndrome," or involuntary extended sleep, has brought him to the attention of officials at England's Ministry of Justice, who want Prince to revive 25-year-old editor Anna Ogilvy, so she can be tried for murder: Anna's been asleep for several years, ever since she was found beside a bloody knife in a cabin next door to the corpses of two of her friends. As Prince attempts to stir Anna, he looks into the factors that might have driven her to violence. Interwoven throughout Prince's investigation are chapters focused on a pseudonymous character who's researching the case for their own obscured purposes, as well as entries from Anna's missing diary, which cover the days leading up to the murders. Blake never lets the reader, or his hero, get comfortable, delivering one game-changing twist after another all the way through to the final sucker punch. The exhilarating results are likely to shock even seasoned thriller fans. Agent: Madeleine Milburn, Madeleine Milburn Agency. (Jan.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Four years after a woman allegedly murdered her best friends while sleepwalking, an ambitious London psychologist gets the opportunity to treat her--and to determine, once and for all, her guilt or innocence. Dr. Benedict Prince, forensic psychologist and sleep specialist, is summoned to a meeting with Dr. Virginia Bloom (his boss at the Abbey Sleep Clinic) and a man from the Ministry of Justice to discuss a recent article in which Ben proposed a possible cure to "resignation syndrome," which is when a patient enters a deep sleep, often lasting for years, as a way of directly avoiding trauma. The government wants Ben to conduct an experiment on a notorious (alleged) criminal: a young journalist named Anna Ogilvy, aka "Sleeping Beauty," who's believed to have murdered two people while sleepwalking, and who hasn't woken up in the four years since. The government needs Anna awake so she can stand trial for these murders. Ben, of course, has little choice but to agree, and he begins sensory stimulation therapy, believing that if he can connect Anna's subconscious to happy memories from her childhood, he may be able to wake her. Before she went to sleep, Anna was working to uncover a connection between one of the most notorious English murderers of the 20th century and a secret government experiment called MEDEA. While she might be guilty, Ben realizes that she might also have been a scapegoat for someone else's murderous rage. And if this shadowy someone has previously killed to protect their secret, Anna's waking may put her, and Ben, in danger. From the bowels of a notorious psychiatric hospital to a primeval forest to the sun-drenched beaches of Grand Cayman, Blake's thriller invokes comparisons to Greek tragedies and locked-room mysteries alike, while exploring the additional complicated psychology of sleep and guilt. While this is fully a "whodunit" with an actual solution, it's even more a "whydunit." Once you pick it up, there's no putting it down. Layered and grandly operatic in scope and tension. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.