
Member Reviews

Thank you to Netgalley, CJ Tudor and Penguin Michael Joseph for my arc of The Other People in exchange for an honest review.
Synopsis: it's been three years since Gabe's life fell apart. The day that his daughter and wife were killed. But Gabe saw his daughter that day, been driven away in a rusty old car. Problem is nobody believes him. Now Gabe has made it his mission to find that car, maybe in finding the car he'll find his daughter.
Katie works at a service station and sees Gabe every day, she feels for him and his search for his daughter because she lost a loved one once too. Her father was murdered and her sister disappeared the same day.
Fran and Alice are always running, Fran is desperately trying to put miles between them and the people who want to hurt them. Because Fran knows the truth about everything, she knows who wants to hurt them and why, and she knows what happened to Gabe's daughter.
Review: every book I've read by CJ Tudor has blown me away. She is a fantastic thriller author who will keep you up all night to finish her books. The Other People is no different, a brilliant twisty thriller which is so sinister it makes you frightened even as you can't stop turning the pages.

I really enjoyed this book so much. It has a really great plot, superb main characters and I read it in one sitting. I would highly recommend this book.

Absolutely thrilling and spine tingling! I love this sort of book as it keeps me enthralled and I never want to put it down. Always a sign of a good book!!! Thoroughly recommended #NetGalley#TheOtherPeople

Wow - an excellent book - the best I have read for a while. I had read the previous book from this author and really enjoyed it, although I wasn't entirely convinced by the supernatural element - but I found this one to have less of a supernatural element and as a result, I enjoyed it much more. It was well written and captivating and I would thoroughly recommend it.

This is a truly atmospheric page-turner, terrifying and gripping. It has so many twists and turns, culminating in a dramatic and unexpected ending. You won't want to put it down!

As expected, The Other People was pretty great! C.J. Tudor is quickly becoming one of my favourite authors. In her latest book she confirms her skill to create a suspenseful story with a supernatural element that is not overdone and still sends chills down your spine.
"Clickety-click, the pebbles whispered."
"The Sandman is coming."
The Other People opens with Gabe driving home when he sees his 5 year old daughter in the back of a car in front of him. Gabe is almost sure he is mistaken as his daughter Izzy is supposed to be home with his wife waiting for him to turn up for dinner. When he calls home the police tell him there's been a robbery and both his wife and his daughter are dead. Fast-forward three years and Gabe is still searching for his daughter, refusing to accept that she died that day. When he discovers new proof that Izzy might be still alive and learns about the other people, things escalate quickly.
The Other People is a compelling multi-layered story, full of twists and tension that is bound to make you keep reading until you know all the answers.

C.J. Tudor is rapidly building a reputation as someone who is able to build twisted, dark thrillers with a supernatural edge and The Other People, her latest offering, doesn't disappoint.
This is a very intricately weaved story. Nothing is unimportant. Prepare to feel a range of emotions for the lead characters, from pity to fear to understanding and many others along the way. Gabe is a lost soul, desperately searching for the daughter everyone else insists is dead but he knows is alive; Fran spends her life on the run to protect her daughter from the same fate which befell Gabe's; Katie thinks she wants to escape from her life of drudgery as a single mother but is terrified of making the leap into the unknown which might bring about change. As their lives veer closer together, savvy readers will be able to put together clues and come up with some answers, but don't bank on those being the right answers. At every turn, Tudor is ready with another shock, another new piece of the puzzle, until the understated yet heart-thumping climax.
I think this might be my favourite C.J. Tudor novel to date.

4.5/5
I don’t think I have enjoyed a thriller this much in a long time. The other people. Just W.O.W. I’ve not yet read anything by CJ Tudor (there will be no stopping me now!!), so I wasn’t really sure what to expect. I didn’t know this book was going to take me… THERE!
The other people has a lot going on, it’s a complex story with a fair few sub stories that you will be wondering for a while how they all link together – don’t worry, they do. The characters … I lovedddddddd them! I loved their individual stories and trying to piece together how everything fit. The characters all had fantastic, well thought out backstories, they had such depth to them that I felt there was really so much to get to know them by. I loved it.
I won’t say anything on the plot itself, I feel like it could be easily spoilt… but it was engaging and captivating with a surprising spooky twist – I’ve recently found out the supernatural aspect is Tudor’s style. It works so well with this story! Could not put this down, if you loved The Chain, you will LOVE this.

Well, The Chalk Man and The Taking Of Annie Thorne were both excellent, but this is even better! The story is riveting, the writing taut and the portrayal of character superb. What starts off as a tale of a man searching for his daughter, whom everybody else swears is dead, leads to so much more, and any reference to the twists and turns of plot would spoil the tension. What a great way to end one decade and begin the next!

This is the first C J Tudor book I have read. Whilst I thoroughly enjoyed the majority of the story - finding out what happened to Gabe and his daughter and how Fran fits into the story, I was not a fan of the supernatural element of it. It didnt really feel like it fit into the story of the characters and felt like it had been forced in, it made little difference to the actual plot I felt.
That being said the overall story was very good, and I would never have guessed what was going on!

I was lucky enough to be able to the read the opening chapters of this book beforehand I knew I had to read the book no matter what.
The story unfolds through three main characters Gabe, Fran and Katie. Gabe’s wife and daughter were murdered 3 years before but Gabe is convinced his daughter is still alive and we follow him on his search to find her and to prove he hasn’t crazy. Fran is on the run from something or someone and then we have Katie, who works at a service station and frequently see’s Gabe come and go. I can’t say to much more about the plot, but what I can say is that this felt very original and I thought the pacing just right for me.
I have to admit at the start I was a little confused as to what was happening, and think this was because of the changing timeline to past and present, but as the plot unfold everything cleverly started to make sense.
The Other People is a cleverly written book that had me gripped from start to end. I was hooked by the engaging and captivating story that kept me at the edge of my seat. and couldn’t stop reading till I got to the end.
This was a great engaging and captivating story that kept me at the edge of my seat, and if you’ve read and enjoyed her previous two books I think you will love this one too. I can’t wait to see what C.J.Tudor has in store for us next.
I can’t wait to add the physical copy to my other two books which share a space on my Stephen King book collection.
I would like thank the publishers Penguin UK, Michael Josephand NetGalley for my eARC in return for an honest and unbiased review.

5 mysterious stars
It’s been a long time since I wanted to read a book by the author and I’m grateful to the publisher for my review copy.
A fast-paced read that I couldn’t stop reading from the first page till the last one. It’s not an ordinary suspenseful, psychological thriller, I found it much more interesting and unpredictable than anything I’ve read or better said expected. I really didn’t know where this story will take me and there are many moments when I was dreading the next scene because, having children is one of my dreaded fear, to come home and find out that your child was kidnapped and you don’t know how and if you’ll find them.
The narrative voice is everything in this story and all the different characters, twists and turns are making this book a must-read.

At first, I was confused, I wasn't 100% sure what was going on with the plot or who the characters actually were. But, Tudor cleverly linked the characters and the plot and everything just slotted perfectly together. I felt really sorry for Gabe and no matter what he had done, I willed him to feel complete as a person again and find his daughter, I also loved the character of Kate and wondered throughout whether she was more than a coffee shop waitress sideline character.
The book is cleverly written and I enjoyed it so much that I read it in one sitting. I always look forward to any book by C.J. Tudor.

You know that feeling when you pick up a book and you just know that you are going to love it? that was how I felt when I dipped into the first chapter of The Other People by CJ Tudor. I really am a fan of the author's work, it's always exactly the kind of book I love to read, but I have to say that I think this is my favourite one yet.
This is a dual narrative story, half of the book focused on Gabe, a man adamant that he had seen his daughter in the back of a strange car and who devotes his life to trying to track her down, even though everyone would have him believe she is dead. And, to be fair, there is overwhelming evidence that this could be true, every reason to doubt what Gabe thinks he saw. On the other hand we have Fran, a woman on the run, trying hard to protect her own daughter. But as to what she is on the run from and how these two stories tie together ... Well that's where this book becomes very very clever.
I don't want to say too much about the story as to do so would give too much away. But it is a kind of six degrees of separation kind of tale of the most thrilling and heart stopping kind. CJ Tudor has infused this book with . such tension, such compelling narrative, that you really don't need to work hard to suspend disbelief and let yourself be carried away by the tale that evolves in front of you.
I really felt for Gabe, for the broken man that he becomes and the way in which he feels haunted by his loss. But underneath it all there is a determination, a focus which endeared him to me and I wanted to see him come good. His relentless trawl up and down the motorway in search of clues feels both futile and heart-wrenching. He is not billed as the perfect man, and the more you read on the more you see the fractures that were spreading through his marriage and the surprising truth about his past. He is human, he has made mistakes and paid possibly the heaviest price as a result. But he is likeable. I was instantly drawn to him as a character.
Fran is an altogether different matter. You get the sense there is something hidden about her, and not just because she is running away. There is a tension in all that she does that adds to the dramatic feel of the scenes she features in. You know she is hiding the mother of all secrets and yet she remains one hundred percent focused on protecting her daughter, so despite a certain lack of trust, I did warm to her too.
CJ Tudor's stories are always infused with a sense of the supernatural or the spiritual, and this is no exception, although far less so obviously than the previous two novels. In this book the threat is far more human, and has a far darker feel as the basic premise is entirely possible. This is a book about the lengths, both good and bad, that someone will go to for family. There is an underlying tension, an atmosphere that comes from knowing the danger can been seen and felt quite clearly.
If you love CJ Tudor's books I am sure you will love this. Laced with mystery, suspense and heart pounding moments of action and intensity, it had me completely taken from the very first page.

I’ve read C. J. Tudor’s other two books and whilst both had absolutely knock-out first chapters, they had slightly disappointing endings. The Other People however was far more consistent throughout. The start is excellent and really drags you straight into the story, and the ending is satisfying, with all the loose ends tidied up nicely (including the one I thought was going to get missed that I’d been grumbling to myself all the way through about!).
My personal opinion is that this book didn’t really need the supernatural element to it: it would have been just as good as a straight crime/thriller with Gabe refusing to stop searching for his dead daughter and Fran on the run. That said though, this book was highly enjoyable and had me guessing all the way through as to who was the ‘baddie’! I particularly enjoyed the multiple POVs - flipping from one to the next never left me confused, only desperate to read faster and find out the full story. Highly recommended.

The opening of this books sets the scene for the haunting story that is to follow: driving home one day, rushing because he is running late, Gabe becomes distracted by the erratic driving of the car in front. As he watches, a face suddenly appears in the back window of the car, and he recognises his young daughter, who should be safely at home. Gabe gives chase frantically, but loses track of the car, and returns home to find his life has been destroyed by murder and violence.
Years later, Gabe drives up and down motorways, stopping at services, searching for any sign of what might have happened to his daughter. Helped by a mysterious character known only as The Samaritan, Gabe learns of a group known as The Other People, an organisation from the dark web who help people get revenge on those who have wronged them.
In addition to this compelling plot, there is an unusual paranormal subplot that runs alongside it, which is not something you often see in a thriller of this type. With echoes of Stephen King, it works well and creates an atmosphere of unease that filters through the rest of the book.

I was delighted to be given a copy of The Other people by C.J. Tudor. I have read her two previous books and loved them and this one is the same calibre as the other two. This one with a bit of paranormal element to it.
Gabe is a broken man after coming home to find his wife and daughter dead, but he is convinced that he saw his daughter in a back of a van after the incident happened. The police first suspect’s that he did it and his wife’s parents’ distances from him. His Father in Law identifies the bodies and is far they are concerned the case is closed. But as far as Gabe is concerned for the next three years, he gives up his job and home and spends his time searching for his daughter Izzy.
Fran and Alice are on the run and hiding from people that may hurt them. When Fran disappears one day, and Alice is told if she needs helps to ring her sister Katie. When she does this all sort of things start to happen. She meets Gabe and suddenly everything starts to come clear.
This is another excellent spooky psychological thriller from C.J. Tudor. It shows the lengths people will go not only find their love ones. But also get justice of people that have wronged in their life. This is a gripping tale and I loved every minute of it and will look out more in the future of this author.

OMG, C.J. Tudor has done it again and written an absolutely gripping, couldn’t put it down thriller!
I didn’t expect to read this book so fast, but I should have known better as the ‘Chalk Man’ blew me away, and this one is just as amazing.
One evening when Gabe is rushing home from work, he sees his daughter in the car in front. From that moment on, his life spirals out of control, and he is faced with lies and depict from people he thought he could trust. He discovers the atrocities of the Dark Web, and before he knows it, he risks losing everything he didn’t think he had.
It had a very different feel to it compared to her first two books, that I said at the time of reviewing the second, that there were too many similarities. This one is completely unique. There are so many twists and turns you just don’t know what the outcome is going to be. There aren’t any significant or major gasp moments as everything is unravelling and revealing itself to you throughout the book. You find yourself in awe, though, by the intricate storylines and how it has all been kept together and how everything was interwoven the way it was. It was very cleverly written and brilliantly thought out. I kept trying to second guess everything but just couldn’t!
The only thing I wasn’t too sure about was the slightly paranormal vein that ran through the story. I just couldn’t quite get on board with the pebble situation or what happened to Isabella. However, I go into Tudor’s books, knowing that they could have a slightly ‘other-worldly’ element to them. So I don’t let this bother me and just go with it.
Overall, a truly enthralling story about a man that has lost everything and has nothing more to lose. This is a first-rate novel which I am sure is going to knock everyone’s socks off next year when it is released. C.J. Tudor really is a master of her craft.

Who are the Other people?
Gabe is driving home one night when he saw his daughter in the back of a truck mouthing Daddy to him. when he gets home his wife and daughter have been murdered and no-one believes him that he saw her.
He then spends three years trying to prove he was right. But what secret is Gabe hiding and is connected to the deaths of his family?
Fran and her daughter Alice are running but from whom and why?
And will the Other People find them all?
Brilliant book.

Great thriller, really good storyline. C J Tudor books are reliably gripping.
Thanks for letting me review this book