When your past is a lie, who are you?
‘Provocative, moving and timely’ Mail on Sunday
‘All the excitement of a thriller with the depth of a literary novel’ Cathy Rentzenbrink
‘As memorable for her sharp and even funny social observation as it is for the powerful outrage that drives it’ Sunday Times
‘Brilliant, chilling’ Helena Kennedy QC
As a teenager, Tess falls into environmental activism – and the arms of an older, charismatic protester. She has never been happier. When he suddenly disappears, leaving her pregnant and alone, she is shattered. Slowly, though, she rebuilds a life for herself and her daughter Mia. ‘We’re all we need,’ she sings to Mia as they dance around the kitchen. ‘Me and you, us two.’
But, as Mia nears her thirteenth birthday, the death of a relative sparks questions – about activism, about her family, about her father – that Tess cannot answer. And when a hidden letter is found, Tess suddenly has urgent questions of her own. As mother and daughter pull apart, caught up in their own private quests for answers, the certainties of memory and history begin to unravel and a single shocking question emerges: if your past is all a lie, then who are you?
Complex, profound and devastatingly timely, this brilliant psychological suspense explores the twisted world of undercover operations, the most secretive part of the secret state where nothing is sacred and no one cares to count the cost.
‘Provocative, moving and timely’ Mail on Sunday
‘All the excitement of a thriller with the depth of a literary novel’ Cathy Rentzenbrink
‘As memorable for her sharp and even funny social observation as it is for the powerful outrage that drives it’ Sunday Times
‘Brilliant, chilling’ Helena Kennedy QC
As a teenager, Tess falls into environmental activism – and the arms of an older, charismatic protester. She has never been happier. When he suddenly disappears, leaving her pregnant and alone, she is shattered. Slowly, though, she rebuilds a life for herself and her daughter Mia. ‘We’re all we need,’ she sings to Mia as they dance around the kitchen. ‘Me and you, us two.’
But, as Mia nears her thirteenth birthday, the death of a relative sparks questions – about activism, about her family, about her father – that Tess cannot answer. And when a hidden letter is found, Tess suddenly has urgent questions of her own. As mother and daughter pull apart, caught up in their own private quests for answers, the certainties of memory and history begin to unravel and a single shocking question emerges: if your past is all a lie, then who are you?
Complex, profound and devastatingly timely, this brilliant psychological suspense explores the twisted world of undercover operations, the most secretive part of the secret state where nothing is sacred and no one cares to count the cost.
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Reviews
A magnificent, nuanced and intricate novel. Trespass is as political as it is personal, both moving and psychologically fascinating
A novel about love -- and state-sanctioned impunity ... Paranoid fantasy or reality? Brilliant, chilling
With great skill and sympathy, Clark evokes a febrile society in which politics, love and art offer no certainties, and the ground always threatens to open beneath her characters' feet.
As memorable for her sharp and even funny social observation as it is for the powerful outrage that drives it
I read Trespass in one go. So perceptive and clever. All the excitement of a thriller with the depth of a literary novel
Provocative, moving and timely
Some characters pull you in from the off and that's exactly how I felt about Tess, a young climate activist who becomes pregnant by an older man who isn't who he says he is
A fascinating tale . . . Clark's historical worlds are meticulously researched.
An irresistible story . . . as compelling as it is expansive - Guardian