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I Let You Go: The Richard & Judy Bestseller Kindle Edition

4.2 4.2 out of 5 stars 50,850 ratings

Lose yourself in the sensational debut I Let You Go - the Sunday Times bestseller, No.1 ebook phenomenon and Richard & Judy Book Club pick.


A tragic accident. It all happened so quickly. She couldn't have prevented it. Could she?

In a split second, Jenna Gray's world descends into a nightmare. Her only hope of moving on is to walk away from everything she knows to start afresh. Desperate to escape, Jenna moves to a remote cottage on the Welsh coast, but she is haunted by her fears, her grief and her memories of a cruel November night that changed her life forever.

Slowly, Jenna begins to glimpse the potential for happiness in her future. But her past is about to catch up with her, and the consequences will be devastating . . .

If you can't get I Let You Go out of your head, don't miss Clare Mackintosh's stunning new thrillers The Last Party and A Game of Lies, featuring the unforgettable DC Ffion Morgan.

'Compelling, with a killer twist'
Paula Hawkins

'A masterclass in plotting . . . I could not put it down' Jojo Moyes

'Astonishingly good' Lee Child

'Chilling . . . I was hooked' Rachel Abbott

'Extraordinarily atmospheric' Alex Marwood

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

At the start of British author Mackintosh’s accomplished debut, five-year-old Jacob Jordan lets go of his mother’s hand for an instant on a rainy evening in Bristol, England, and darts into the road, only to be struck and killed by a hit-and-run. The investigation lands on the desk of Det. Insp. Ray Stevens and his eager new detective constable, Kate Evans. Mackintosh alternates between the slow, but fruitless, police work and the movements of artist Jenna Gray, who’s haunted by Jacob’s death and relocates to an isolated Welsh village, where she keeps to herself, warming slightly to the local vet after finding an abandoned puppy, and even then keeping the details of her previous life a secret. Back in Bristol, Ray and Kate work the case to the ground, despite a lack of leads; predictable sparks fly, even though Ray is happily married with two children. Mackintosh easily shifts points of view and keeps readers on their toes, slowly upping the suspense, so that when she does reveal her twists they—mostly—work. (May)\n

Review

“Chilling, compelling, and compassionate.”—Paula Hawkins, #1 New York Timesbestselling author of The Girl on the Train

“Astonishingly good.”—Lee Child, #1
 New York Times Bestselling Author of Make Me
 
“Genuinely shocking...[A] cunning psychological thriller.”—Marilyn Stasio,
The New York Times Book Review
 
‘“On the level of the movie 
The Sixth Sense for its cleverness...This kind of sharp, cunning writing makes one eagerly look forward to Mackintosh’s next novel.”—Shelf Awareness
 
“An intense psychological thriller…[that] revels in surprises and twists…Outstanding.”—Associated Press

“You'll be shocked by the twist in the middle of 
I Let You Go—just don't spoil it for everyone else!”—PopSugar
 
“Thrilling...a tense psychological thriller.”—
Real Simple
 
“Jaw-dropping...the kind of book that sticks in the reader’s mind well after the final sentence.”—
Kirkus Reviews (starred review)

“A wonderfully layered thriller that skillfully builds from that one tragic event. It makes a good match for fans of Sophie Hannah and Erin Kelly.”—
Library Journal (starred review) 
 
“Mind-bending.”—
Booklist
 
“Addictive...one thrill after another.”—Samantha Hayes, author of 
What You Left Behind

Product details

  • ASIN ‏ : ‎ B00LTUC5VC
  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Sphere; 0 edition (November 6, 2014)
  • Publication date ‏ : ‎ November 6, 2014
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • File size ‏ : ‎ 3125 KB
  • Text-to-Speech ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Screen Reader ‏ : ‎ Supported
  • Enhanced typesetting ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • X-Ray ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Word Wise ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Sticky notes ‏ : ‎ On Kindle Scribe
  • Print length ‏ : ‎ 385 pages
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.2 4.2 out of 5 stars 50,850 ratings

About the author

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Clare Mackintosh
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Welcome to my Amazon Author page. Whether you're new to my work, or a hard-core fan, it's lovely to see you here. You're joining me just as I release something a little different to the crime novels I'm mostly known for. I PROMISE IT WON'T ALWAYS HURT LIKE THIS is a conversation about grief, based on my experiences of navigating bereavement following the loss of my son eighteen years ago. It's a book to offer hope when you feel as though there's none to be had; a book to give to a friend when you don't know what to say.

On the fiction side, my latest book is A GAME OF LIES, the instant Sunday Times bestseller, and the second in my crime series featuring Welsh detective Ffion Morgan, who we first meet in THE LAST PARTY. I'm hard at work now on the next in the series.

I'm the author of I LET YOU GO, I SEE YOU, LET ME LIE and HOSTAGE - page-turning thrillers that have sold more than two million copies across 40 countries, and hit bestseller lists including The Sunday Times and The New York Times. I also wrote the emotional rollercoaster, AFTER THE END: a family drama about an impossible choice that threatens to tear a couple apart. It's the most personal book I've written, and I've loved hearing from readers who have connected with it.

If you click the yellow 'follow' button, Amazon will send you an email when I have a new release, or if there's a special deal you might be interested in. It's the best way to make sure you never miss a book! I love connecting with my readers, and there are plenty of ways you can get a sneak peek at what's going on behind the scenes. My free book club offers reading recommendations and exclusive extras to members (sign up at my website - the link's below), and on my Facebook page (also below!) you'll find book discussions - both spoiler-laden and spoiler-free - and regular giveaways. If it's general chit chat you're after, please do follow me on Instagram, where I go to avoid writing, and to share snippets of my life in rural Wales, complete with teenagers, dogs and Pete the goat. See you there!

* * *

With over 2 million copies of her books sold worldwide, number one bestseller Clare Mackintosh is the multi-award-winning author of I Let You Go, which was a Sunday Times and New York Times bestseller and the fastest-selling title by a new crime writer in 2015. It also won the Theakston Old Peculier Crime Novel of the Year in 2016. Both Clare's second and third novels, I See You and Let Me Lie, were number one Sunday Times bestsellers. Her first three thrillers were selected for the Richard & Judy Book Club, and together have been translated into forty languages. After the End was published in 2019 and became an instant Sunday Times bestseller, and in 2021 Hostage flew straight into the top ten. Her new crime series, featuring Welsh detective DC Ffion Morgan, has been critically acclaimed, with both The Last Party and A Game of Lies hitting the Sunday Times top ten. Together, her books have spent more than sixty-five weeks in The Sunday Times bestseller lists. In 2024 she published a memoir, I Promise it Won't Always Hurt Like This.

Clare is patron of the Silver Star Society, a charity based at the John Radcliffe hospital in Oxford, which supports parents experiencing high-risk or difficult pregnancies. She lives in North Wales with her husband and their three children.

* * *

For more information find Clare on Facebook or Instagram at @ClareMackWrites

#ILetYouGo #ISeeYou #LetMeLie #AftertheEnd #HostageBook #TheLastParty #AGameOfLies #IPromise

Customer reviews

4.2 out of 5 stars
4.2 out of 5
50,850 global ratings
Great Debut, but low in thrills
3 Stars
Great Debut, but low in thrills
3/5I Let You Go by Clare Mackintosh, is a quiet but intriguing novel. A wonderful debut thriller, that explores the emotions people feel in the aftermath of a heartbreaking event, as well as peoples relationships to each other. I found the story interesting and a page turner and enjoyed it, however I didn't feel as 'thrilled' as I hoped and there was definitely room for improvement.The story follows multiple perspectives of people in the wake of a hit and run that resulted in the death of a small child. We primarily follow Jenna Gray as she flees to the sea side to start a new life in a cottage and reflect on her life, and the loss of her son. She struggles to come to terms with her life as it is currently and is a very broken person. In this little town, however, she begins to make friends, find herself again as she slowly begins to pick up the pieces. The problem is she's purposefully picking up certain pieces and refusing to face her past.We also follow investigators, Ray and Kate, from Bristol who refuse to give up on the hit and run case. They juggle red tape, dead end leads and a missing mother of the victim with an increasing attraction to each other and current cases. In addition to this, Ray is struggling with his home life and how to balance what he wants for them with what they need, as well as understanding his own needs.Jenna, who is trying to run away from her pain, and the investigators who refuse to give up on it all collide and turn everything we think we know upside down.This story was very well done. I loved the perspective changes, switching from Jenna to Ray. It gave me as a reader both sides of the situation. Having both sides however wasn't enough in this Whodunit story, leading me to question everything I was reading and look deeper in the situtation. This book was written with a quiet and ethereal quality, fitting of the grey sea-side setting. It was a tense calm, one you could cut with a knife. However this didn't slow down the read, the story progressed and a nice pace and I read it in two sittings. The characters were interesting, true emotional and flawed people. I was interested in them and it fueled my need to know their story.However, I found it difficult to connect with their thought process. Often in the story decisions were made that just didn't seem logical to me. Once that logical connection was broken I had a hard time connecting with the wake of their choices, because the base of it was faulty and unbelievable to me. I believe they could have been developed better and their actions backed up more. The weak base for their actions felt sloppy.With this said however, it didn't ruin it for me. I still devoured it and wanted to know more. But I also have this ache for the logical version. Because if this is as good as it it is, then that version would be amazing.My major disappointment with this story was the thriller in itself. I must admit I read many reviews in advance and had steeled myself for a thriller that would scare me, make me cry, make me feel nervous and anxious. I just didn't feel that way. This book was primarily quiet, which is fine, but even though the tension was present in never got to a boiling point for me. There was one major twist for me that made me go "What, Oh my god, what" I tell my boyfriend the twist even though he had no background. It was great, it rekindled my desire to keep going and took my completely by surprise. The problem is after that surprise, that was kind of it. Then it was just the story, just the result of that. Their was an attempt to add more tension but I found it forced (interesting and enjoying to read) but forced. It followed some tropes and began to fall into a bit of a soap opera-y ending. The second major "twist" just didn't phase me because it came out of nowhere and wasn't needed. It didn't add to the story, it didn't help it in anyway but it upped the soap opera level to plain old soap opera.It was a good read, an interesting look at characters and loss. But it wasn't a thriller to me, and the soap-opera thrills that over-powered the second half of the book overshadowing the actually well done plot twist of the first half. I found it hard to connect to the characters choices (I connected with characters themselves just fine) but their actions and thought processes seemed illogical and uninspired.A good debut. I believe she had great ideas and ability, and I look forward to her future books to see if these two things ever come together a little smoother.
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Top reviews from the United States

Reviewed in the United States on December 22, 2022
At its center, this is a story about a woman running away from her previous life. I will discuss only a few main plot points to avoid giving away too much. Jenna Gray has rented a spare cottage in a small Welsh town. She's timid and doesn't interact with many people, just her landlord and a woman at a local shop. Jenna is a sculptor, and the privacy the cottage affords appeals to her. She acquires a dog and soon has a canine companion who accompanies her on walks on the beach. She meets the local veterinarian and keeps him at a distance for reasons only known to her. This, of course, only makes the man more interested in getting to know her.
Detective Inspector Ray Stevens and a rookie are working on a case with few results. Stevens is drawn to the younger Kate, his partner because she's someone he can talk to easily and knows the score around the office. The case they have been assigned is of a young boy killed in a hit-and-run right in front of his mother. Stevens and Kate give the boy's mother assurances that they will find the killer, but they have had months with no leads. They have been officially pulled off the case. In private, they decide to continue investigating the boy's death. The extra hours Stevens is putting in make his wife Mags, a former detective constable, unhappy. Especially since those hours are spent with an attractive younger woman. Stevens's home life with his wife and kids begins to suffer.
Finally, the extra work the detectives, have put in begins to pay off. They find a witness who describes a car being driven erratically near the area where the boy was killed. They focus on locating the car. Meanwhile, they learn that the police liaison assigned to the boy's mother has fallen short of keeping contact with her. She has left her apartment and has moved away. No one knows where she is. Stevens and Kate are relieved to be reassigned to the case, which has been reactivated with the new information. The only problem is now they have a killer to catch and a mother who's gone missing.
The author has written a psychological thriller that may seem to point to certain apparent facts to some readers but turns things around as the story unfolds. The novel is even more interesting because the author is a former policewoman. She knows the way the police work. I thoroughly enjoyed this one and recommend it to mystery and thriller readers.
7 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on January 2, 2017
CAUTION: SPOILER ALERTS

Anytime a book is touted as a best selling, gripping suspense novel with a twist, I immediately begin thinking "Will this one be different?" For me, "I Let You Go" didn't have all the meat to catapult it to the level of the hype but I still found it an enjoyable read. Like many other critiques, I also found the beginning slow after a while and was becoming impatient for something to happen. The story line is basically about a hit and run where a child is dead and there are supposedly little leads to go on.

Overall, the story line is not difficult to figure out in terms of the supposed twists. It's easy to figure out that the woman who left to run to Wales was not Jacob's mother although the author does a decent job in covering the concept as if it could be for a short period. Even after that part has been deduced, you know that Jenna isn't exactly who she says she is.

The abusive husband concept plays true to the idea of Jenna needing to hide but her own actions make the reader's eyes roll as she slowly unravels her own safety net, not only to him but to the police. The police in the story come across as typical locals that don't look deep into the story from the beginning. Why did they not investigate Jacob's mother and the potential elements around her? Why did they not look at the pole the car hit to determine the paint color and polymers that would've scraped away? Why did they not investigate Jenna Gray as possibly not Jenna Gray? Even they admit that one.

The ending was equally predictable as many other areas of the book with the husband being the driver of the car and Jenna protecting him. What didn't make sense or sound plausible was that he just happened to end up on the same street the night of the "accident" purely out of circumstances. Nor did it make sense that Jenna was willing to allow herself to go to jail out of fear for her life from him. Personally, a better ending to this story would've been that Jenna was the driver, had killed Jacob and played out the game of "hold out" until the end when hubby would've been sent up the river.

Although there was a lot of easy story to figure out, the writing was very good and there was an acceleration that made me want to continue reading the book through the night. Sadly, the hardest part about this book was not the death of Jacob or his mother but the violent abuse Jenna faced from her husband. It's the only part of the tale that really delves deep into the true horror behind the plot
4 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on February 25, 2024
First book of her's that I've read... It won't be the last! So gripping and thrilling. At one point I had to go back and re-read as I thought I must have missed something - I didn't (IYKYK!) Clare Mackintosh had my heart in her hands from page one till the end! I highly recommend this book!
One person found this helpful
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Top reviews from other countries

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critic
5.0 out of 5 stars Really well written, captivated from the first page
Reviewed in Canada on June 28, 2022
I really enjoyed this book. It was well written. The characters were described in detail so you got the picture of how they thought and who they were as people. They felt real. I could imagine the beach and the little secluded house. I thought the story was very interesting all the way through, and I was surprised by the ending. It all pieced together wonderfully. I would read another of her books again if they are as good as this one.
One person found this helpful
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Bookaholic42
5.0 out of 5 stars A Twisty, Compelling, Great Read
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on April 27, 2024
Was not expecting the mid-way twist. Or how I'd constantly revise and review my feelings about the key incident - right up to the final few pages. Loved it.
K P Vineeth
5.0 out of 5 stars Edge of the seat thriller
Reviewed in India on January 16, 2024
Completely thriller and engaging, the start was awesome but felt somewhat slow the end of the part 1 was an adrenaline rush. The way in which every twists revealed was really awesome.
NT
5.0 out of 5 stars One of the best thrillers I’ve ever read.
Reviewed in France on August 23, 2023
Brilliant. Couldn’t put it down. Much better than other hyped thrillers by Tana French and Lisa Jewel etc. If you’ve read and liked Paula Hawkins’ ‘The Girl on the Train,’ which was excellent, you’ll like this too.
Thiago C.
5.0 out of 5 stars Twists incríveis, excelente leitura!
Reviewed in Brazil on January 23, 2017
Trama muito bem escrita, personagens envolventes e leitura bem forte e profunda.
Totalmente recomendo! Mas possui cenas bem violentas, que não são para qualquer um.
One person found this helpful
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