2 Novels by Peter James
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Overview: Peter James (born 22 August 1948) is an international best-selling British writer of crime fiction. James was educated at Charterhouse School and went on to Ravensbourne Film School. For a brief period of time whilst at film school James worked as Orson Welles’ house cleaner. Subsequently he spent several years in North America, working as a screen writer and film producer, beginning in Canada in 1970 working first as a gofer, then writer, on the children’s television series Polka Dot Door. Today he divides his life between his country home near Brighton, Sussex and his apartment in Notting Hill, London. His interests include criminology, science and the paranormal, as well as food and wine − he is currently the restaurant critic for Absolute Brighton magazine. He also as self-confessed "petrol head". James has written 26 novels, including the International best-selling crime thriller series featuring Brighton-based Detective Superintendent Roy Grace, which have sold 15 million copies worldwide and have given him seven consecutive UK Sunday Times number ones, as well as number ones in Germany, France, Russia and Canada, and he is also a New York Times best-seller.
Genre: Mystery/Crime Thriller
Possession (1988): The police told Alex Hightower that her son Fabian was killed in a car crash, but she didn’t believe them – she’d seen him that morning. As Alex keeps seeing Fabian, her grief turns into terror and she consults a medium. The medium is petrified – it is Fabian and he wants to come back.
Perfect people (2011): When a young couple join a fertility programme run by a clinic in America they little suspect that the happy day that follows is the last day of mankind’s evolutionary supremacy. Their child is wonderfully clever, wonderfully well adjusted. Perfect in fact. Genetically modified in secret he and the other children born as a result of the programme, have a strange bond. They know they are different, they know they are better. None of the parents knew what the clinic was really doing. Unfortunately neither did the clinic. Mankind is about to be left in an evolutionary backwater. The children will move on, they don’t need us. But a child needs its parents. Can the love between a parent and child survive the blind march of genes?
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