DISCOVER DU MAURIER AT HER DARKEST A stunning collection of thirteen chilling stories from the
Godmother of Fear introduced by international bestseller Stephen King. *** 'Her talent is
a bright light that will guide you. These remarkable stories await' STEPHEN KING 'A
marvellously dark unsettling collection. I loved it' SARAH WATERS 'Unputdownable . . . After
Midnight promises to never let you sleep again' LUCY ROSE 'Daphne du Maurier is the Godmother
of Fear' ALICE SLATER ' This superb collection is menacing moody and mendacious on every page
. . . Roll on autumn evenings to curl up with this' DAILY MAIL 'An ideal autumn read' THE SUN
PICK OF THE WEEK 'These stories are the work of a protean restless and rather dangerous
spirit . . .They are wild at heart like the woman who made them' SLATE *** On a sharp
December day the wind changes - and the birds begin to gather. In the twisting alleyways of
Venice a grieving couple catch a glimpse of their lost child. A woman returns home to find no
trace of her existence. From the inimitable imagination of Daphne du Maurier these thirteen
stories pierce to the dark heart of our relationships: between men and women humanity and
nature love and obsession the future and the past. Uncanny provocative and spine-crawlingly
terrifying these tales will keep you up long after midnight. Whatever you do don't look now .
. . PRAISE FOR DAPHNE DU MAURIER: 'Masterful troubling and wickedly seductive' Sarah Perry
'Du Maurier is mistress of the sleight of hand in fiction' Maggie O'Farrell 'She was able to
make worlds in which people and even houses are mysterious and mutable not as they seem'
Olivia Laing 'The master of slow-burning menace' Stacey Halls 'Daphne du Maurier remains the
indisputable queen of the sophisticated literary thriller . . . often imitated and never ever
surpassed' Laura Shepperson 'A glittering collection of dark gems . . . Du Maurier was the
queen of creepiness and a writer of extraordinary talent. These stories will introduce you to
her dark imaginings and keep you up well into the night. Do have nightmares. They'll be good
ones' Anna Mazzola