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Book cover

Now you see me : a novel

McGeorge, Chris. (Author).

They came to Standedge Tunnel, the longest canal tunnel in England. Six students go in, and two and a half hours later, the boat reappears on the other side with only one of the students, unconscious, and the dog. Five years later, the case of the Standedge Six has faded from most people's memory. The police investigation concluded that the only remaining student killed his friends, hid the bodies on the boat and then returned to move them to an undisclosed location. In prison, the last student allegedly killed himself, which the police took as a confession. But some don't think the mystery is as easy as that. Ron Ferris, a middle aged and jaded journalist, who is grieving after his wife goes missing, decides to write a book about the Standedge Six. What first he thinks of as a mere cash-grab quickly becomes more personal as he sees similarities between the students' and his wife's disappearance. Ferris sees the case from every angle - the law, the conspiracy theorists, the supernatural cultists. But what is he really searching for? And do the answers he's looking for lie deep within the darkness of the tunnel?

Book  - 2019
MYSTERY FIC McGeo
2 copies / 0 on hold

Available Copies by Location

Location
Stamford Available
Victoria Available
  • ISBN: 9781335080875
  • Physical Description 328 pages ; 24 cm
  • Publisher [Place of publication not identified] : [publisher not identified], 2019.

Additional Information

Syndetic Solutions - Summary for ISBN Number 9781335080875
Now You See Me
Now You See Me
by McGeorge, Chris
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Summary

Now You See Me


Six went in...only one came out. The Standedge Tunnel, the longest canal tunnel in England, has become one of the rural village of Marsden's main tourist attractions. Now it's also a crime scene. Six students went into the tunnel on a private boat. Two and a half hours later, the boat reappeared at the other end of the tunnel carrying only one of the students, Matthew. He had been knocked unconscious and has no memory of what took place in the tunnel. The police suspect he killed his friends, hid the bodies and later moved them to an undisclosed location. But sitting in a cell awaiting trial, Matthew maintains his innocence. When Matthew contacts a famous author asking him for help in return for information he claims to possess about the author's long-lost wife, it's an offer that can't be refused. But before the author can prove Matthew's innocence, he must first answer a far more unusual question: How did five bodies disappear into thin air?