Member Reviews
Having read Joseph Knox's other books I was really interested in reading this so thank you for the advanced copy.
Dark, destructive, addictive, dangerous all spring to mind. I would love to see this as a TV series or TV film please.
What an absolutely great read and one I will definitely read again in a few years; time.
Please keep writing and let me have more advanced copies - I love the way Joseph wrights and this is very highly recommended.
Firstly a huge thank you to the publishers for my copy to review on netgalley. I’m a huge fan of this authors books so was excited to see what he had written next.
I’ll be honest its very different both to what I expected and to his series . I am left pondering after reading did I enjoy it.. not in a bad way! It is a highly thought provoking and unsettling account of a true mystery surrounding a teenager girls disappearance. I’m a mum to a teenage girl who’s off to uni this year so perhaps this shifted the level of enjoyment for me personally.
However it is incredibly fresh and written in a easy to read and follow dialogue. I raced through as was compelled to know more and find the truth.
It’s a dark topic but you can see the grit ,determination and passion that was given in getting this story out there.
Cleverly written and in a unique original style that captures the reader straight away.
Published 17th June
I really loved this totally gripping thriller. The story and twists turns of the plot kept me reading when I really should have gone to bed. The story of a missing student was told by Joseph Knox in a very original way. It's through the person of Evelyn who is investigating the disappearance and who communicates by email with Joseph as if they are friends. The book is structured as the transcripts of interviews of friends and family of the missing student. A great way to tell the story.
I was hooked from the beginning to the end. It had a personal connection for me because I was a student in Manchester and lived in Owens Park where the story is set - an added bonus for me.
I read True Crime Story without knowing much about it and I think probably that's useful with this book. So, if you think you'll read it, while I'll attempt as always to be spoiler free, I'm not sure how possible/helpful this is in this specific case and you might perhaps want to stop reading this for now.
Okay, welcome, welcome to all those who are still with me. I genuinely don't know how to review this book, I finished reading it a few days ago and I'm still not sure what I think of it. I haven't read a Joseph Knox novel before by the way, so I'd be intrigued to know how this compares with his other work because I'm getting the feeling it's quite different.
When I say I knew nothing about the book, I really mean that. I downloaded it on NetGalley and, with the information available, I believed it to be a crime novel and knew the title was True Crime Story. I have a complicated relationship with true crime which is naturally part of the reason I picked it up in the first place but also pertinent to how I feel having read it. Like many people, I have always been drawn to true crime, but through a combination of over consumption and more recently, experiencing actual crime in real life (albeit peripherally), my appetite has both diminished and altered. I try nowadays to limit the kind of material I read or watch, and I have a particular hatred for TV shows, literature and (let's be honest it's mostly these) podcasts that simply utilise crime as a vehicle for the hosts to bounce off for comedy or to revel in the shock and awe aspect of the crimes. I won't name names, simply because I don't want to offer any free promotion. What I do still enjoy though are projects where the topic of true crime is genuinely used in an interesting or even educational way. Examples of this would be Sarah Koenig's Serial where she uses a case to explore and educate listeners on the way in which the US justice system functions, Phoebe Judge's Criminal which really steers away from violent crime or Michelle McNamara's I'll Be Gone In The Dark, which fuses true crime with memoir and an exploration of the way in which online communities come together to assist in police investigations. Even without knowing much about what to expect, from marketing alone, True Crime Story felt like something that would be placed in this sort of territory.
This, I'm afraid, is where I don't think I can avoid spoilers of some kind. True Crime Story is blurbed as being 'a deft blending of fact and fiction'. The story focuses on a central crime, that of the disappearance of 19-year-old Zoe Nolan while at Manchester University back in 2011. Most of the story is told through interviews with various people involved in the case - friends, family, police officers - that are undertaken and collated by writer Evelyn Mitchell. We're told in the foreword (by Knox) that Mitchell is a friend of his, that she's been sending him the book in sections as she's been writing it (these are included in email form throughout the novel) and that sadly, as she reached the conclusion of the murder mystery, was herself killed. Knox then took over writing the piece and published it under his own name. In addition to the emails and interviews, the book contains newspaper clippings, police reports and photographs. It's an intriguing concept, one which is further complicated when Knox hints at suggestions that he himself has been accused of having some involvement in either Zoe or Evelyn's deaths. The format is pretty engaging, if a little heavy on interview transcripts, and really plays into the salacious nature of true crime, how we as readers really want to know what happened despite how dismal and depressing the tale is.
In today's society I doubt that Knox expected many people to get through the whole book without googling Zoe Nolan but it's testament to my own patience that I was a few chapters in before I did so and to Knox's skill that, even when I didn't immediately find information about Nolan, I wasn't completely convinced she'd never existed. Knox does a great job of holding up a mirror to human nature, not just in building a believable portrait of a missing girl and those she's left behind, but also in understanding and encouraging a reader's capacity to get to a point where we're actively wishing Zoe into existence just so the sad story can be true. Dark, right!?
The thing is though, Zoe Nolan doesn't exist and nor does any other character in the book bar Knox. He's created this false world around him and, in some ways, it's a really cool and effective concept. This method of playing with your audience, making some question what's true and what's not isn't new. It happens a lot in magic shows and, memorably for me because I was on a school trip and nearly peed myself in shock, in the stage play The Woman in Black. In this case though I wasn't really sure what it was supposed to achieve other than being really well plotted and cleverly executed. While I enjoyed the initial play off between fact and fiction, the truth is that in a piece of writing as big as a novel there needs to be a longer term reason for a choice as bold as this. I'm just not really sure what that was. Was Knox simply trying to entertain or was he trying to make a bigger point about our consumption of true crime? This is where my discomfort with utilising true crime as entertainment rears its head again. On one hand this is absolutely not a real story so what does it matter? On the other hand, for a while Knox wants you to believe that it is. I'm not sure if that matters but still, something in that feels worse to me than just happily creating a world that everyone knows is fictional. I don't know if I'm overthinking this.
Despite my mixed feelings on this, I did find myself turning to pick it up again and again. It had much of what I love about a thriller: an intriguing premise, plenty of red herrings and a couple of solid twists plus the added bonus of playing with writing styles. Like I said, Knox is clearly a talented writer and the novel is excellently structured. For me though, at a certain point, the form stopped serving the story and instead became an irritation. So much of the story was told in transcript form which was neither quite realistic enough but still not as interesting as prose probably would have been and then, just as I was getting absorbed into the story, it was interrupted be the secondary meta storyline between Knox and Evelyn. Like I said, I have pretty mixed feelings on this novel and the above was an attempt to work through those! With my earlier disclaimer in mind, if you've read this far then you're probably either not intending to read the novel or already have done. In which case, come discuss it with me!
This was a dark read, one that left so many unanswered questions. so many what ifs. It was so unsettling, the was 19, studying in Manchester, and she left a party one night, never to be seen again. They mystery surrounding her disappearance has never been solved. The whole ordeal is still shrouded in mystery. Some things were seen, others were heard but nothing aligns. Stories overlap, inconsistencies appear. The incident is still unanswered. I was fascinated by this read and still haven't forgotten it.
True Crime Story by Joseph Knox is a clever, intricate crime novel that will be a must read in 2021 for crime lovers.
It’s a book within a book blending ‘fact’ with fiction investigating missing 19 year old Manchester University student Zoe Nolan.
Knox turns up the boil ever so slowly as you wade through interview transcripts between his writer friend Evelyn Mitchell and Zoe’s friends, family and police.
The strength of this book is the characterisation for each of the major players. At no time do you feel like they sound the same person, they all have their quirks.
I also laughed a few times, such as one character describing another character’s boyfriend as being pretentious because they met at an Interpol concert, nothing ‘anytime a frontman sings like he’s phoning in sick, you can usually depend on his fans being pretentious’.
Don’t be fooled by this book, you will think it’s simple but instead you’ll find yourself gripped by the very slow growing tension that when more layers are revealed you’ll be stunned by what you read.
Add this to your TBR pile.
Thank you to Random House UK, Transworld Publishers and NetGalley for the ARC.
I had to stop this book to consult Google after the first couple of pages as I was convinced that I was reading non-fiction and didn't ever recall hearing about a missing student called Zoe Nolan. It was that convincing for me.
This book is very cleverly done, I read it as a galley but I'd imagine a physical book will be better. The reason why is that the story is split up in to interviews with a multitude of people along with email transcripts. They all pertain to the disappearance of Zoe Nolan.
So who is Zoe? She is a 19 year old student attending Manchester Uni. Along with her twin sister Kim, she lives in student accommodation within a rather grim tower block with several other girls. None of them know each other until this point. Zoe had hoped to attend a course at the Academy of Music, but she didn't get a placement so ended up attending the same university as Kim.
Kim is not pleased one bit about this, Zoe is a golden child. Their overbearing father is convinced that Zoe is a wonderful performer and has pushed her to the limit, it has gotten to the stage that Zoe seems to believe her own hype. People love her, she is pretty and blonde and both girls and boys want to be her or be with her. Kim is the opposite, she lives in her sisters shadow and despises the fact that her father thinks Zoe can be some sort of star. She'd hoped life in Manchester would be a new start for her without the constant presence of her sister. Of course that doesn't happen.
The girls start to enjoy student life but the flat isn't perfect, things start to go missing. Inanimate objects like keys can easily go missing but when it is discovered that all of Zoe's underwear has disappeared, well a sense of unease settles in on the flat. But they sally on, Zoe finds a boyfriend, Kim goes Goth, they try to make friends and enjoy their new life. All that comes crashing down when Zoe goes missing after a raucous party.
I can't really tell you too much more without giving things away but this book quickly becomes creepy, all of the characters (and there are quite a few) fall under suspicion. This is really a book within a book. The emails I mentioned above go backwards and forwards between Joseph Knox (yes the actual writer of this book) and his friend Evelyn who writes a book about Zoe's disappearance. They speculate on the characters and what they could possibly be hiding.
This is an intriguing read, with many twists, turns and I didn't see that coming moments. A great read.
Thank you to NetGalley and Doubleday for providing me with a copy in exchange for an honest review
This story is centered around Zoe Nolan, a 19 year old student university student, who goes missing in 2011. We are taken through the events leading up to her disappearance, by people who know her. Her twin sister, parents, friends, and investigators who are working on the case.
This is a compelling read and I felt like I was putting together the pieces of this puzzle as each part of her story drew me in further. This story has dark and unsettling moments, Zoe's university accommodation raises some eerie questions and I felt creeped out a lot of time while reading this book, and was led to a very dramatic ending.
A worthy read for true crime fans, who love twisty turny stories
This is my first Joseph Knox novel and I was so intrigued by the premise of this and as I was a student in Manchester myself, many years ago the setting really appealed. This started superbly and I found myself really drawn into the different voices and perspectives and loved the originality of it. However, after a promising start ,I found myself losing interest about half way through and found the characters immensely unlikeable. So sadly, overall this was a disappointing read for me.
3.5 stars
Many thanks to NetGalley and the publisher for a digital ARC.
Nothing beats stories with unreliable characters.
Evelyn Mitchell is a journalist thats wants to find the truth of what happened to Zoe Nolan after she disappeared in Manchester. She recruits Joseph Knox, a crime writer as someone to bounce her ideas with.
I personally enjoyed how the book is mainly written in the fit of emails and transcripts of interviews of the friends and people involved. Who do you trust? Especially when the same event can be described so differently!
I think the book was really well pulled off since there were so many different characters and all of them were themselves and it was possible to differentiate them by their differences.
There were parts that may felt a bit farfetched but I was so absorbed by the story that overall that did not impacted negatively my reading experience at all.
Having had another book by Joseph Knox on my shelf and waiting to be read for a while, I have to confess that I will have to make the time to read it as soon as possible.
I would like to thank Random House UK, Transworld Publishers, Doubleday and Netgalley for an advanced digital copy of this book in exchange for an honest and unbiased review.
Zoe disappears on the eve of leaving Manchester for the Christmas break and is never seen again. Some years later, the writer Evelyn Mitchell decides to investigate and commences interviews with Zoe's friends and other interested parties. During this period, she consults with fellow writer Joseph Knox for advice and support.
This is the 2nd edition of the story and it appears that Knox has played some part in the writing of the story and has also incurred the displeasure of the publishers. Additional notes and corrections have been added to this edition to counter the negative publicity.
The narrative builds slowly with input from a range of characters but really bursts into life with a string of revelations that may or may not be relevant to the case. There is also the added mystery of why Knox has taken ownership of this edition of someone else's work.
A decent mystery and an intriguing exploration of the writing process and the blurred lines between fact and fiction.
True Crime Story is Joseph Knoxx's first standalone novel after his great Aidan Waits series. Its a fictional novel, thats meta, in that it features Knoxx as himself corresponding with his friend Evelyn via email as she looks into the mystery of the missing Zoe Nolan. The novel is split into sections that tell the story of what happened the night Zoe disappeared via interviews that Evelyn has taken from each of her friends and family.
The whole novel has a crimewatch feel about it. We have the infamous night of the disappearance told from different perspectives and of course unreliable narrators. There are plenty of red herrings and a very menacing feel throughout as the novel progresses and the revelations come thick and fast.
Unfortunately my netgalley copy made a couple of the email sections pretty much unreadable which tarnished the experience slightly. I could still gather what happened though from the following chapters, but still.
All in all this is a very ambitious novel which must have taken a hell of a lot of time and effort. I have to commend Knoxx for having the balls to try, and to actually mostly pull it off. Well worth a read.
What happens to the girls that go missing? In this unique story that blends together fact and fiction, we follow the last days of Manchester university student Zoe through interviews and emails from her family, friends and the investigating officers.
I thought this was a unique and different twist on the genrez and because I use to be a university student at Manchester I could vivid picture the places Zoe visits and the parallels with my own past. There's a distinct atmosphere that permeates the story, almost as though it's perpetually on high alert, with plenty of tension to create s high stakes environment. The various secrets that are eventually uncovered are also very satisfying and unpredictable.
Howeverz the set up the book, by following events through other people's eyes, did leave me feeling a little disconnected from Zoe. She's like an enigma, one we never really get to explore and understand. I wanted to delve more into her pyshe, and try and form some kind of emotional attachment to her and her life. I never really got that. Most of the supporting characters are also rather unlikeable, leaving me feeling a little cold and detached from the case and it's mysteries. It's also a little slow to start, and quite confusing, until we start to pull the case together around 50% of the way through. It felt like an uphill battle at times, but the payoff was worth it if you don't mind the pace.
Interesting concept, that I feel doesn't quite pull of what it set out to do. A more compelling lead character that gave the reader a chance to connect with them would have been a benefit. Howeverz it's well written and well crafted with some big twists.
*3.5 stars *
I loved Joseph Knox’s The Smiling Man, so when I saw that he had written this stand-alone, True Crime Story, I was really excited to read it.
Listed as a blend of fact and fiction, the storyline revolves around missing 19 year old Manchester university student Zoe Nolan, who went missing from her university halls of residence in 2011, and was never seen again.
Readers are taken through events leading up to Zoe’s disappearance by way of accounts and emails from her twin sister Kim (a student at the same university), her parents, friends, and also the police and professionals investigating this missing person case.
This was a really hard one for me to review, it’s just so different from Knox’s Aidan Waits series, and I admit to being irritated and confused initially, I just found it difficult to grasp something that (for me) felt quite disjointed. However, slowly and gradually, Zoe’s story, (that is) the story presented to us by the aforementioned characters, pulled me in, and from then onwards, I found it a more compelling read. He said/she said/ they said - but what is the truth of it? I didn’t know who or what to believe, but I (eventually) enjoyed the journey.
When I started reading this, I honestly thought it was real life, or at least based on it. It's very confusing in a good way mind as it's so clever at the beginning, you don't know what is real or what isn't.
It feels like a podcast, scrapbook kind of story. It does get confusing however and I struggled at times to see what I was reading and who was speaking. Was it a case of the book being too clever for its own good. Not sure but I've read another book where the author is in the story and that read clearly for me.
I'm on the fence with this one. I can appreciate it but feel there are other novels = the Six Stories series for example that do the 'examination of a seemingly real crime in a novel' idea. This fell far short of that but it did still provide a lot of entertainment.
Zoe Nolan goes missing after a party in her Manchester student digs.
Seven years later, efforts to keep her case in the public eye continue.
Evelyn Mitchell is a journalist is writing a true crime story about the case and wants to find the truth as a way to make sure her book has a powerful ending. She enlists a crime writer called Joseph Knox as a mentor and sounding board.
This book is told entirely in the form of transcripts from interviews with interested parties, all of whom are unreliable narrators; notes and clippings from secondary sources; emails between writer and mentor. We are told umpteen versions of the same story, but with varying perspectives based on the interviewees' agenda, the passage of time and both writers' arrangements of the documents in the case.
This is a very difficult trick to pull off and Knox does it incredibly well, managing to give each interviewee their own voice and style, building up to the final tragedy. I was gripped by the way suspense built and more was revealed at each stage. There were some plot points that stretched credibility, but all of them were convincingly explained.
I wished it had ended differently, of course I do. I will now seek out Mr Knox's other work.
I absolutely loved this book. Hooked from the very first page, I felt I was standing beside Evelyn and Joseph trying to unravel the mystery of Zoe's disappearance. There were a few reveals I really didn't see coming. My heart broke for Kimberley and how awful her father was to both her and Zoe. I zoomed through it quickly, always wanting to return, eager to find out. The resolution was satisfying and I'm sitting here wondering how much is fact, how much is fiction. It's a dark story but one I devoured. Thank you for the opportunity of an advance copy. I'd give more than five stars if I could, it'll be a hard one to top.
True Crime Story by Joseph Knox is the story of a missing girl in Manchester, Zoe Nolan, despite what the title suggests it is fictional, though Knox places himself in the book as a character, a writer under fire for not disclosing his involvement, which gives the story that feeling of "did this really happen?"
Zoe Nolan is a twin, attending Manchester University alongside her twin sister, who goes missing one night after a party. Because Zoe is blonde, pretty and a talented singer her case gets a lot of attention as do the people around her who may or may not be to blame for her disappearance.
The book features a character called Evelyn Mitchell who Joseph Knox meets at a book signing when she approaches him to tell him about the case of Zoe Nolan. Evelyn is investigating the disappearance and writing a book about it and Knox becomes a writing mentor for her. Evelyn sends chapters and updates to Knox by email, and discusses the case and her theories with him. Much of the book is taken up with in person interviews with friends and family of Zoe and some is news features about the case, which again gives the story a feeling of reality.
And, in part, there is no reason why this couldn't be a "true" story. People do go missing all the time. A quick look at the Missing Persons UK website will show you that there are a disturbing number of people who go missing every day in the UK. Some turn up safe and sound in a few days or weeks and others remain unheard of for years, with no trace at all. The few cases that make a big splash on TV and newspapers tend to be either young children or pretty white girls (preferably middle-upper class if you don't mind), indeed this phenomena is so marked it even has a name "Missing White Woman Syndrome".
So while this book features such a missing white girl, who attracts a lot of publicity, I did feel that the writer was shining a light on the media practices which facilitate this. We see the lives of those around Zoe fall apart as various friends and acquaintances are vilified in the press and all but accused of murdering Zoe. Anyone who remembers the case of Joanne Yeates, will recall that her landlord Christopher Jeffries was questioned by police about her murder. He was innocent and another man was later convicted of the crime, but not before Jeffries had his life torn apart by six newspapers who later paid him an undisclosed sum for libelling him. This case is an example of an "ideal victim" with a potential suspect who fitted the bill, so it must be him.
Where the book excels is at identifying the fallout for the friends and family of Zoe after she goes missing. Cracks appear as suspicions rise, and with no conclusive outcome, the lives of the people around Zoe crumble to pieces. Zoe, or her body remain unfound, but life goes on without her. As Evelyn is interviewing it becomes apparent that they all have their own axe to grind and their own ideas about who was responsible for Zoe's disappearance. It also becomes apparent that Zoe, the ideal victim, wasn't all she seemed and there was a darker side to her that she was keeping hidden from her nearest and dearest.
The use of a twin sister for Zoe also allows Knox to play with the old "twin switch" trope. In their conversations by email Evelyn raises the possibility that Zoe killed her twin so she could take her place and remove the pressure of being the "good twin" from her life. This is quickly dismissed, but it seemed that Knox is enjoying playing with some of the tried and tested crime standards.
Without giving too much away the book does reach a conclusion, though not the one you might expect. There is no Perry Mason moment when a crucial witness suddenly reveals it was them all along and leads police to the body. Zoe remains missing and actually her case remaining open and inactive feels like the most realistic ending there could be. It's hard to accept that someone can just vanish and never been seen or heard of again, but it happens. In fiction, as in life, humans like their stories all wrapped up and tied with a bow, but Knox makes the brave choice to not lead us to Zoe, wherever she may be and leave the mystery unsolved.
The most exciting and original crime book you’ll read this year. Really enjoyed this. Unique idea brilliantly executed.
Thought I would love this book as I am a big true crime fan - but this book was an absolute mess. Confusing writing style, a strange mishmash of nonfiction and fictional elements, and the author injected too much of his personal opinion into the narrative. Not a responsible true crime book, it felt too salacious and honestly an insult to the family.