Writing Magazine

Riding the rollercoaster

Have you ever watched a 1940s noir film and been drawn into a storyline involving a character whose malevolent intent has unleashed a trajectory towards an inevitably nightmarish conclusion? That sense of impending doom is the feeling you get reading bestselling author Louise Candlish’s rollercoaster new thriller The Other Passenger. The chain of events begins when Kit, who always commutes to work on the river bus with his older friend Jamie, doesn’t turn up. From there, events spiral out of control in a gripping, unsettling narrative that will have readers glued to the pages.

‘I’d been wanting to do an update on the old noir classics like Double Indemnity in a setting that hadn’t been done before, put a spin on an old-style mystery with fraud and seduction and a femme fatale,’ says Louise. ‘I like to take the conventions and twist them.’

delivers, thrillingly, in spades. It ticks all the noir boxes. There’s a dark, urban setting, fraudsters on the make, an irresistible temptress, a plot where each twist and turn increases the feeling of a net closing in. Perhaps most disturbingly of all, though, there’s no sense of this noir being vintage, retro or shadily nostalgic. It’s set in contemporary London, conveying the greed and resentment caused by the hike in property prices that means it’s near impossible for millennials to

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Writing Magazine

Writing Magazine3 min read
Get Published
In the 1970s and 80s horror fiction was huge, the genre dominated by bestselling titles by Stephen King and James Herbert, writes Gary Dalkin. Shelves were filled with books by Ramsey Campbell, Shaun Hutson, Brian Lumley, Mark Morris, Stephen Laws a
Writing Magazine1 min readComposition & Creative Writing
Ware Poets Open Poetry Competition 2024
Win a £600 first prize in the contest that will be judged by Paul Stephenson. Enter original, unpublished poems up to 50 lines in the 26th Ware Open Poetry Competition. The prizes are £600, £300 and £150. There is also a special Sonnet Prize of £150
Writing Magazine4 min read
What A ***!!!**!*
A strange thing happened last week. I was lost for words. Happily, it didn’t last long. The reason I was dumbfounded was that I came across a publisher who found a new way of being a chiselling shithead. Now, to be fair to traditional publishers who

Related Books & Audiobooks