Leah
I’m a huge fan of dual narrative novels, where you make an error in judgement and suddenly two paths appear and it’s used so well in Anything You Do Say. Joanna is on a night out with her friend, when she’s harassed by a bloke at the bar. So much so that when she’s walking home, alone, and she hears footsteps behind her, she’s sure it’s him; that he’s coming for her and as she starts to walk down some steps to a tunnel, and he gets right up close to her, she pushes him and in that moment her life changes. On the one hand, we see what could happen if she comes clean, calls the police, reveals what she’s done and we also see what happens if she just goes - no one is around, no one has seen what she’s done, so she goes home and pretends like nothing has happened. The chapters alternate and you’re never quite sure which was the correct decision…
Anything You Do Say was an incredibly gripping read, but it also made me intensely nervous and paranoid. It’s the kind of thriller that no matter what decision Joanna made, there was no winning. Both narratives felt heavy, thick, cloying. You could feel everything crumbling, because as we learn, Joanna at her core is not a terrible person and so whether she’s facing what she’s done or trying to hide what she’s done, you can tell how deeply it impacts her. It’s so hard to know what I would do in that situation - unless you’ve been in that position, of walking home alone in the dark and hearing footsteps, you can’t understand that kind of fear. It’s awful, suffocating, wondering if something’s going to happen to you.
I think what I loved the most about this book was Gillian’s insider knowledge - she’s a lawyer! I know that’s not a catchall because for all I know she could do like family law, but she has a grip of what the law is, and so in each narrative it was intriguing to see the process. How the police deal with an attack where they have no suspects, no one to pin the blame on - what do you do? And then the flipside of how it all goes down if you confess to what you did. It actually baffled me how bad it seemed for Joanna to confess. It baffled me how bad her charges would be, for confessing! For getting help! You see drunk drivers who kill people get lesser charges for God’s sake, and it does really confuse me how backwards British law seems to be. How the same crime can be committed but different sentences handed down, but I did appreciate that insider knowledge.
I found Anything You Do Say to be incredibly gripping. Though be warned, this is not one of those thrillers that will ever make you smile, because Joanna is just in the worst of positions no matter what she does. I still don’t know which one I would pick. I have an inkling, because of the way things ended up panning out, but I don’t know. What I do know is that this is a high class thriller, with a high class concept. I will forever love novels that split into two. They are just so fascinating and this is, I think, the first thriller I’ve read to go down this road. I have massive respect for Gillian because as she says in her acknowledgements, she essentially wrote two books! In one! What a trooper. But she hit it out of the park and I was gripped from start to finish.