The Children of Eve: Gripping, terrifying and utterly absorbing, the new Sunday Times bestselling Charlie Parker thriller (May 2025)

John Connolly

The Children of Eve: Gripping, terrifying and utterly absorbing, the new Sunday Times bestselling Charlie Parker thriller (May 2025)

Sale price17.99 Regular price21.24 RRP
15% Off
SKU: 9781529391930
Quantity:
Free, fast & tracked delivery over €10 Free, fast & tracked delivery over €10
Ireland's best value books. Why pay more? Ireland's best value books. Why pay more?
Same great price online and in-store Same great price online and in-store
Proudly Irish and family-run since 1989 Proudly Irish and family-run since 1989

Contact

'Connolly grips like a vice and he's an extraordinary storyteller' Crime Time
'One of the best thriller writers we have' Harlan Coben

Wyatt Riggins, the boyfriend of rising Maine artist Zetta Nadeau, has gone missing, leaving behind a cell phone containing a single-word message: RUN.

Private investigator Charlie Parker is hired to find out why Riggins has fled, and from whom.

Parker discovers that Riggins, an ex-soldier, has been involved in the abduction of four children from Mexico: three girls and a boy, all belonging to the cartel boss Blas Urrea - except Urrea's family is safe and well in Mexico, which means the abductees cannot be his children. Yet whoever they are, Urrea wants them back, and has dispatched his agents to secure them, even if it means butchering everyone who stands in their way.

One of those agents is Eugene Seeley, a clever, ruthless solver of other men's problems. The other is an unknown woman.

Every child has a mother. Now Charlie Parker will face one unlike any other, and learn the terrifying truth about the Children of Eve.

Praise for John Connolly:

'John Connolly is the creator of a unique blend of thriller and horror who receives rave reviews every time' Sunday Telegraph
'Dark and dangerous ... but where there is also kindness, loyalty, love' Irish Examiner
'To my mind, Connolly is Ireland's Stephen King' Matt Nixson, The Express