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[A] tricky psychological puzzle…. It’s a joy to encounter a suspenseful book whose turns lurk, rather than lumber, around the corner. The story in Mr. Nobody corkscrews and somersaults…. Past mysteries haunt the present in ways that are both startling and claustrophobic…. [Steadman] is even better at writing than acting. If her first book, Something in the Water, was the Steadman gateway drug, then Mr. Nobody is the heroin that will get you hooked. Let’s hope, for purposes of withdrawal mitigation, there’s a third.
New York Times Book Review


[A] highly imaginative tale tinged with Hitchcockian tension and kinetic pacing…. Steadman’s deliciously provocative novel dishes up enough questions to fill the entire space devoted to this review. She cleverly cloaks them in more mysteries, turns and shocking revelations. Much like Something in the Water, Mr. Nobody pits fascinating characters against each other and allows them to act on their worst impulses…. Her literary instincts are spot on, and the protagonists she creates feel as alive as some of the characters she’s inhabited on film…. This talent for inhabiting characters carries over into her writing: Mr. Nobody and Emma Lewis, though invented, seem so real. Mr. Nobody turns out to be somebody, and his unmasking makes for a delightfully compelling story.
Washington Post


A mesmerizing psychological thriller…. In a series of exciting twists and shocking turns, Emma and Mr. Nobody come to discover they are connected in ways neither could have imagined. Steadman’s story is wholly unique and exceedingly well executed. Suspense is peppered in all the right places, and every bread crumb dropped throughout the story returns in wildly imaginative ways.
Associated Press

 
[Mr. Nobody] somberly explores trauma and its aftermath, but ample twists and a rollicking pace make it a perfectly thrilling read.
Vanity Fair
 

[O]ver-the-top psychological thriller…. Point of view shifts diminish the novel’s readability at times, but the elaborate plot, filled with seemingly impossible twists, drives to a suspenseful conclusion. Readers will look forward to Steadman’s next.
Publishers Weekly


From an Olivier-nominated actress whose debut, Something in the Water, was a New York Times best seller and an ITW Thriller Award finalist.
Library Journal


Steadman once again brilliantly paces the action from the very first scene.… As in all good thrillers, lights unexpectedly snap out, a creepy house is hidden down a tree-woven lane, and long-buried secrets emerge.… A spellbinding thriller perfect for dark and stormy nights.
Kirkus Reviews