About The Illusion of Innocence
• Paperback: 304 pages
• Publisher: Honno Ltd (November 5, 2015)
Three people on a crowded train, brought there by the same crime.
Archie Price, painter and police artist, blessed with a photographic memory, is travelling to Chelmsford to testify in a murder trial.
The accused, Freddie Porter, is under police escort in the guard’s van.
Freddie’s sister, Polly, is desperately trying to escape her brother’s gang before they realise what she’s done, unaware he’s on the same train.
When the locomotive is derailed, Archie and Polly are injured, and put up by the same local family while they recover.
Where is Freddie?
Polly is so terrified she is driven to desperate measures and Archie finds himself being drawn into her nightmare…
Also in the Archie Price series, The Colours of Corruption:
‘A historical thriller that is as rich in emotional depth as it is ingenious in plot’ –Michelle Spring
Purchase Links
Honno Press | Amazon US | Amazon UK
About Jacqueline Jacques
Jacqueline Jacques was born in war-time Anglesey, North Wales, but has lived most of her life within spitting distance of London; hence the East End references in each of her seven novels. She taught in mainstream primary and special needs schools, until the writing bug bit her and has never regretted her late career move. She is now the author of six books, this is her seventh, and the second of the Archie Price Victorian thrillers.
Find out more about Jacqueline at her website, and follow her on Twitter.
Jacqueline’s Tour Stops
Tuesday, December 1st: Girl Lost in a Book
Tuesday, December 1st: Dwell in Possibility
Wednesday, December 2nd: Raven Haired Girl
Thursday, December 3rd: FictionZeal
Monday, December 14th: Helen’s Book Blog
Monday, December 21st: From the TBR Pile