
Synopsis
The brilliantly twisty mystery from Jane Harper, the bestselling author of The Dry and Force of Nature, now major films starring Eric Bana.
āA fantastic crime writerā - Bella Mackie, author of How To Kill Your Family
In Exiles, Investigator Aaron Falk finds himself drawn into a complex web of tightly held secrets in South Australia's wine country.
A mother disappears from a busy festival on a warm spring night.
Her baby lies alone in the pram, waiting for a return that never comes.
A year later, Kim Gillespieās absence still casts a long shadow as her friends and loved ones gather to welcome a new addition to the family.
Joining the celebrations on a rare break from work is federal investigator Aaron Falk, who begins to suspect that all is not as it seems.
As he looks into Kimās case, long-held secrets and resentments begin to come to the fore, secrets that show that her community is not as close as it appears.
Falk will have to tread carefully if he is to expose the dark fractures at its heart, but sometimes it takes an outsider to get to the truth . . .
Exiles is a New York Times and Sunday Times Top 10 bestseller and the final Aaron Falk mystery, following on from The Dry and Force of Nature.
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Praise for Jane Harper:
āAn avalanche of suspenseā ā David Baldacci
āAddictive storytellingā ā Ann Cleeves
āA hugely gifted writerā ā Marian Keyes
āExceptionalā ā Jane Casey
āOutstandingā ā C.L. Taylor
āSpellbindingā ā Ian Rankin
āA stunningly atmospheric readā ā Val McDermid
āBrilliantly pacedā ā Susie Steiner
āI devoured it in a day. Her best yet!ā ā Liane Moriarty
āPhenomenalā ā Chris Whitaker
Details
Reviews
Once again Harper proves that she is peerless in creating an avalanche of suspense with intimate, character-driven set pieces that are as exquisitely engineered as the inner workings of a Steinway. Harperās legions of fans will exult in reading Exiles
While so much egregiously repetitive, flatly written fare holds sway in the crime fiction idiom, itās a cause for celebration when genuinely accomplished writers energise things. A prime example? Antipodean star Jane Harper... she remains incontrovertibly the reigning queen of Aussie crime fiction.
This is a softer, gentler Harper, but with the same fine writing and addictive storytelling
Harper skillfully ratchets up the tension in this powerful, slow-burning portrait of small-town life. . . high quality, atmospheric crime fiction





















