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Jonathan Meredith

This series plunges readers into dark and suspenseful psychological thrillers where the lines between good and evil blur dangerously. Follow a protagonist facing brutal kidnappings and claustrophobic confinement that push his psyche to its absolute limit. These narratives explore profound trauma and the fight for survival under extreme duress. Each installment promises an intense experience filled with unexpected twists and a chilling atmosphere.

Prove Yourself a Hero
A Midsummer Night's Death
Midsummer Night's Death

Recommended Reading Order

  1. 1

    Kidnapping is always an unpleasant business, but in Jonathan Meredith's case it is positively barbaric. Kept for hours on end in claustrophobic confinement, he remembers that he used to imagine suffocation as an innocuous death. He would never think that again.

    Prove Yourself a Hero
  2. 2

    Jonathan Meredith did not like Robin, the English master at Meddington Boarding School. It was not his inability to control his classes that he disliked, but rather his indifference to the feelings of others. When Robin drowns in the river close to the school, Jonathan suspects murder.

    Midsummer Night's Death
  3. 2

    A Midsummer Night's Death

    • 304 pages
    • 11 hours of reading

    Jonathan doesn't like Robin, the English master at his boarding school. It's not his inability to control his classes that he dislikes, nor even his incompetence as a teacher - it's his complete indifference to the feelings of anyone but himself. The coroner rules that it was suicide, but Jonathan soon comes to have reasons for doubting this .

    A Midsummer Night's Death