Bolinda Home Page

Login

Basket totals

Items:
0
Total:
AUD$ 0.00

Search Results

You searched for '17 August 2019-17 November 2019'. 482 results were found.
To add items to your order, enter quantity and click 'add selected products to order'
Nothing Important Happened Today
Released the same day as the standard print edition
Title:
Nothing Important Happened Today
Written by:
Will Carver 
Read by:
Ciaran Saward 
Format:
Unabridged CD Audio Book 
Number of CDs:
Duration:
8 hours 30 minutes 
Published:
November 14 2019 
Available Date:
November 14 2019 
Age Category:
Adult - Explicit 
ISBN:
9780655639466 
Genres:
Fiction; Crime & Thriller; Psychological Fiction 
Publisher:
Bolinda audio 
Qty
Format
Price
Bolinda price
AUD$ 39.95
AUD$ 39.95
 

International bestselling author

When strangers take part in a series of group suicides, everything suggests that a cult is to blame. But how do you stop a cult when no one knows they are members?

Nine people arrive one night on Chelsea Bridge. They’ve never met. But at the same time, they run and leap to their deaths. Each of them received a letter in the post that morning, a pre-written suicide note and a page containing only four words: Nothing important happened today. That is how they knew they had been chosen to become a part of The People Of Choice: A mysterious suicide cult whose members have no knowledge of one another. By the morning, People Of Choice are appearing around the globe: a decapitation in Germany, a public shooting at a university in Bordeaux; in Illinois, a sports team stands around the centre circle of the football pitch and pulls the trigger of the gun pressed to the temple of the person on their right. It becomes a movement. A social media page that has lain dormant for four years suddenly has thousands of followers. The police are under pressure to find a link between the cult members, to locate a leader that does not seem to exist. But how do you stop a cult when people don’t know they’re members? WARNING: CONTAINS VIOLENT AND GRAPHIC CONTENT

'A thrill of genuine discomfort ... horribly addictive.'
The Telegraph