One of the best openings I've read in forever. I devoured it. * Alex Michaelides *
A Lesson in Cruelty is Harriet Tyce's darkest book yet. It's twisted and compelling and completely unpredictable. The shocks kept coming right up to the final pages. * Lisa Jewell *
A juicy, sophisticated, layered and intelligent read for the crime fiction connoisseur. Harriet's best so far. * Sophie Hannah *
A Lesson In Cruelty is whip-smart, deliciously dark, utterly compelling with gut punching twists right up until the last page. A first class thriller. I loved it! * Claire Douglas *
A Lesson in Cruelty is a lesson in craftmanship. A dizzyingly satisfying page-turner and an exploration of redemption and damnation. Harriet Tyce at her best! * Sarah Pinborough *
Dark, twisted and utterly nerve-jangling, A Lesson In Cruelty is a sharply structured thriller that left me breathless. * Lucy Clarke *
A shocking, provocative, standout thriller. A Lesson In Cruelty is Harriet Tyce at her twisting, wicked, razor-sharp finest. * Chris Whitaker *
An edge-of-your-seat thriller and a brilliant, furious meditation on the modern prison system. Harriet Tyce's eye for people - their foibles, missteps, and cruelties - is sharp as a blade. * Abigail Dean *
Inventive, chilling and utterly compelling, A Lesson in Cruelty is in the very top tier of psychological thrillers and further cements Harriet Tyce's place amongst the great British crime writers. * M. W. Craven *
A brave and affecting novel which is dark as night and not afraid to explore the depths of the human experience. The strands of the story come together in a satisfying and tragic fashion, that makes you think about how we punish people and why we always judge women so much more harshly than men. * Araminta Hall *
Perfect plotting, utterly brilliant. * B.A. Paris *
Superb, twisty plotting that's sure to keep readers guessing until the very end * Femi Kayode *
I absolutely loved it and devoured it whole in one day. So suspenseful and clever of course, but such great characterisation and real heart. * Laura Marshall *
An imaginatively told (and very bingeable) thriller. * John Marrs *
Compulsive, dark and smart, A Lesson in Cruelty delivers on every level. Justice, revenge and punishment are meted out and questioned throughout this twisty, terrifying thriller with a heart. * Gilly Macmillan *
A deliciously sinister tale of revenge and redemption, with heart-in-mouth tension and head-spinning twists. This is Tyce at her spine-tingling best. * Ellery Lloyd *
Absolutely page turning * Louise Hare *
Excellent, gripping, chilling, clever * Trevor Wood *
Thought provoking and intense, these three cleverly interlocking stories come together in a tense and intriguing finale. I raced through it! * Sam Holland *
Mysterious and beautifully-constructed with an electrifying pace and dark undercurrents, A Lesson in Cruelty is a white-knuckle, gripping read. * Heather Critchlow *
The scale of this book! A finely drawn jigsaw of characters, stunning prose and a harsh critique of the crushing power wielded by a few. I gasped aloud at the finish - a denouement that will blow you away. A triumph. * Rachel Wolf *
Compelling, sinister and powerful, A Lesson In Cruelty gripped me from the first page. * Caroline Hulse *
Superb writing, twisty intriguing plot. Wolfed it down. * Emma Curtis *
A cunningly crafted masterpiece of a thriller. Tyce weaves a trio of threads together so effortlessly that when the explosive end hits, it hits like a freight train. * Robert Rutherford *
Another brilliant psych thriller from Tyce, an absolute master of the slow reveal. A Lesson in Cruelty explores themes a culpability, imprisonment and innocence. Her characters are beautifully portrayed and the book is full of Tyce's tell-tale spiky women. * Niki Mackay *
A Lesson in Cruelty is a masterclass in the dark art of plotting. A propulsive read that crafts a scintillating and vivid story out of characters that gnaw and claw from the page. This is a great crime novel, and the chills last long after the final page is turned. Absolutely stunning. * Janice Hallett *