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Margaret Yorke

    January 30, 1924 – November 17, 2012

    Margaret Yorke, a celebrated crime fiction writer, is renowned for her compelling narratives that delve into the lives of ordinary individuals thrust into extraordinary and often harrowing circumstances. Her literary style is characterized by exquisite language and a profound exploration of character psychology, with Yorke famously stating that her characters often guided her writing rather than the other way around. She emphasized the primacy of character development over intricate plotting, believing that readers connect deeply with the relatable conflicts that emerge from everyday life. This focus on authentic human experience, coupled with her masterful prose, has cemented her reputation among readers and critics alike.

    Margaret Yorke
    Cause For Concern
    The Eleventh Commandment. Flight of Eagles. The Street Lawyer. False Pretences
    Devil's Work
    The Hand of Death
    Almost The Truth
    Speak for the Dead
    • 2014

      A Case To Answer

      • 336 pages
      • 12 hours of reading

      Margaret Yorke delivers incredibly tense and chilling novels of suspense, delving into the darker recesses of the human psyche, as extraordinary events collide with everyday lives. Winner of the 1999 Cartier Diamond Dagger for her outstanding contribution to the crime fiction genre.

      A Case To Answer
    • 2014

      Margaret Yorke delivers incredibly tense and chilling novels of suspense, delving into the darker recesses of the human psyche, as extraordinary events collide with everyday lives. Winner of the 1999 Cartier Diamond Dagger for her outstanding contribution to the crime fiction genre.

      Cause For Concern
    • 2014

      A Question Of Belief

      • 320 pages
      • 12 hours of reading

      Margaret Yorke delivers incredibly tense and chilling novels of suspense, delving into the darker recesses of the human psyche, as extraordinary events collide with everyday lives. Winner of the 1999 Cartier Diamond Dagger for her outstanding contribution to the crime fiction genre.

      A Question Of Belief
    • 2014

      Margaret Yorke delivers incredibly tense and chilling novels of suspense, delving into the darker recesses of the human psyche, as extraordinary events collide with everyday lives. Winner of the 1999 Cartier Diamond Dagger for her outstanding contribution to the crime fiction genre.

      Act of Violence
    • 2013

      Devil's Work

      • 178 pages
      • 7 hours of reading

      Alan Parker cannot face telling his wife he has lost his job. Each day he goes off to 'work'. Other than this deception he is honest and loyal, but all changes when he happens across a child after an accident and then meets her mother. A double life follows. The child goes missing and the police are involved ... with yet more twists to follow.

      Devil's Work
    • 2013

      The Hand of Death

      • 212 pages
      • 8 hours of reading

      We meet George Fortescue and Ronald Trimm. The former appears gentle and ordinary, whilst Trimm is successful, but deprived because of his frigid, controlling, wife. Pornographic magazines fill the void until he encounters a willing widow. Two rapes and murders occur, but it is Fortescue who receives the attention of the police.

      The Hand of Death
    • 2013

      Almost The Truth

      • 288 pages
      • 11 hours of reading

      Margaret Yorke delivers incredibly tense and chilling novels of suspense, delving into the darker recesses of the human psyche, as extraordinary events collide with everyday lives. Winner of the 1999 Cartier Diamond Dagger for her outstanding contribution to the crime fiction genre.

      Almost The Truth
    • 2011

      Grave Matters

      • 162 pages
      • 6 hours of reading

      Amelia Brinton appears to have accidently fallen to her death in Greece. Her friend also meets her death having been pushed down stairs in the British Museum. Dr. Patrick Grant connects the two events and his investigations lead him to a quiet backwater village in Hampshire where yet more mysteries unfold.

      Grave Matters
    • 2002

      The price of guilt

      • 304 pages
      • 11 hours of reading

      Louise Widdows has never been happy in her marriage. Of a generation where the woman's role was assumed to be one of support and supplication, she provided both in exchange for a secure roof over her head. But her facade of genteel acceptance disguises two secrets - a child born in adultery and given away at birth, and a small inheritance she has kept hidden from her husband. Then two events align to free her from her miserable existence: the father of her son dies allowing her the luxury of attempting to find him, and her husband abruptly leaves her. Abandoning the shabby matrimonial home, she moves into the cottage left to her by her mother and begins to blossom in her independence. But other events have collided - the discovery of a body near her old home and another close to a former residence of theirs, and the realisation that her husband has absconded with a charity's funds as well as the contents of their bank account. Suddenly her new life doesn't seem so secure, and she begins to doubt that she will have time to enjoy it, never mind locate her unknown son.

      The price of guilt
    • 2002