I can see her through the glass door.
I just needed to know what happened.\' Stardust Book Reviews, ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐.
Kept me hanging onto every single word...
I couldn\'t put it down!...
It kept me awake when I should have been asleep...
What a book!...
Goodness.
My.
I\'m begging.\' Goodreads reviewer, ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ \'Oh.
PLEASE read this.
I was stunned...
Holy crap.
There were seriously like four twists at the end, all of which left me with my jaw on the floor... the fact that ANYONE can write this well is just shocking.
Slater: \'AMAZING...
What everyone is saying about K.
L.
If you like Gone Girl and The Girl on the Train you will LOVE The Evidence .
Slater about the darkness behind closed doors.
Why has it taken Simone so long to tell the world the truth? And will the consequences be devastating for Esme? An utterly addictive and jaw-dropping read from bestselling author K.
L.
Forced to question what Simone has told her, she can\'t help but wonder if murder was the only way out of Simone\'s marriage.
And when Esme\'s beloved sister is left for dead in a nearby wood, Esme\'s life begins to unravel.
But not everyone is pleased that Esme is telling Simone\'s story.
Then Simone begins to tell her story of an abusive relationship where she was a prisoner in her own home, and Esme decides that the truth needs to come out.
At their first meeting, when Esme sees Simone sitting across the table from her in jeans and a lemon tunic top, she is stuck by her ordinariness.
And Esme, recently freed from her own toxic marriage, is confident she can get Simone to open up.
Simone has remained silent since her husband\'s death but after a decade in prison, she is willing to talk to Esme.
So when journalist Esme secures an exclusive interview with her it feels like the opportunity of a lifetime.
The young mother accused of killing her husband in cold blood, one sunny afternoon, while their son played in the room next door.
Everyone\'s heard of Simone Fischer.
She looks the exact opposite of the type of woman that might murder her husband.
She\'s smaller in real life than I expected.
I can see her through the glass door