Shafted
On sale
2nd October 2008
Price: £9.99
‘One of the bad girls of gritty crime’ Daily Mirror
Larry Logan is a small-time TV star with a mile-wide ego. Gutted when his latest show is axed, he’s less than impressed when the only work he can get is fronting a fake game show – actually an undercover police sting to entrap criminals.
His reluctance evaporates when the show rockets his career back to prime time stardom. And when lovely, shy Stephanie enters his life he thinks he finally has it made.
But Larry doesn’t know how dangerous those criminals are. He has shafted some dangerous men – and they want revenge.
‘A cracking read that will chill you to the bone’ Sun on Two-Faced
‘Mandasue has played a real blinder with this fantastic novel’ Martina Cole on Forget-Me-Not
Larry Logan is a small-time TV star with a mile-wide ego. Gutted when his latest show is axed, he’s less than impressed when the only work he can get is fronting a fake game show – actually an undercover police sting to entrap criminals.
His reluctance evaporates when the show rockets his career back to prime time stardom. And when lovely, shy Stephanie enters his life he thinks he finally has it made.
But Larry doesn’t know how dangerous those criminals are. He has shafted some dangerous men – and they want revenge.
‘A cracking read that will chill you to the bone’ Sun on Two-Faced
‘Mandasue has played a real blinder with this fantastic novel’ Martina Cole on Forget-Me-Not
Newsletter Signup
By clicking ‘Sign Up,’ I acknowledge that I have read and agree to Hachette Book Group’s Privacy Policy and Terms of Use
Reviews
Mandasue has played a real blinder with this fantastic novel.
'A glamorous nightclub hides a seedy underworld that Heller knows only too well.'
'Sexy and slick.'
'A hard-hitting tale of sex, drugs and guest-lists.'
Gripping . . . powerful writing.
Cracking page-turner . . . a gritty compassionate account of life on the margins.
Alarming . . . beguiling . . . exhilarating.
plausibly dark and edgy thriller
'Wonderfully wicked . . . Suspense intersects brilliantly with savage pop culture satire.'