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The Passengers

The Passengers 1

A near-future thriller with a killer twist

by John Marrs
Paperback
Publication Date: 04/06/2019
4/5 Rating 1 Review

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$22.99

The new high concept thriller from the bestselling author of The One - soon to be a major Netflix series.

Eight self-drive cars set on a collision course. Who lives, who dies? You decide.

The new gripping page-turning thriller for fans of Black Mirror from the bestselling author of Her Last Move and The One - soon to be a major Netflix series.

When someone hacks into the systems of eight self-drive cars, their passengers are set on a fatal collision course.

The passengers are: a TV star, a pregnant young woman, a disabled war hero, an abused wife fleeing her husband, an illegal immigrant, a husband and wife - and parents of two - who are travelling in separate vehicles and a suicidal man.

Now the public have to judge who should survive but are the passengers all that they first seem?

ISBN:
9781785038884
9781785038884
Category:
Thriller / suspense
Format:
Paperback
Publication Date:
04-06-2019
Publisher:
Cornerstone
Country of origin:
United Kingdom
Pages:
416
Dimensions (mm):
197x127x26mm
Weight:
0.28kg

"One of the most exciting, original thriller writers out there. I never miss one of his books"
Simon Kernick

"With some real jaw dropping moments, it was an edge of your seat read that even surpassed The One. This will be the must read book of summer 2019."
Claire Allan

"A fabulous writer"
Cara Hunter

John Marrs

John Marrs is an author and former journalist based in London and Northamptonshire. After spending his career interviewing celebrities from the worlds of television, film and music for numerous national newspapers and magazines, he is now a full-time author.

He is the bestselling author of: The One, The Passengers, The Minders, What Lies Between and When You Disappeared.

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In a world where self-drive cars take the hassle out of getting from A to B, eight people go for a drive one morning. A hacker has set them on a collision course. Only one will survive. It’s up to the public to decide which one.

“‘I have programmed your car to take you on an alternative route this morning. And in two hours and thirty minutes, it it likely that you will be dead.’”

Scheduled to meet their maker in the near future are:

Passenger 1: A married young woman who is 7 months pregnant. She’s a teaching assistant who is driving to her husband’s workplace this morning.

Passenger 2: An unemployed and homeless young man who is suicidal.

Passenger 3: An elderly actress who is on her way to a hospital to visit teenage cancer patients. Even if you decide you don’t like her, then surely you wouldn’t kill her dog who is travelling in the car with her, would you?

Passenger 4: A mother of two and a police officer.

Passenger 5: The husband of Passenger 4. He runs a refurbishment and construction company. He and his wife are travelling in separate cars.

Passenger 6: A stay at home mother of five who is trying to escape from an abusive husband.

Passenger 7: A disabled war veteran who’s on their way to the hospital.

Passenger 8: An asylum seeker.

It’s kind of like the trolley problem, if it was on steroids.

Who would you save?

How do you determine which life is the most valuable when you don’t know the whole story?

That is the task Libby, a mental health nurse with PTSD, has before her today.

“‘For every one of your actions today, there will be a reaction.’”

This entire book is like watching a car crash unfold. Literally. And because I’m apparently all about realism, I read some of this book while I was sitting in my car. It was not moving at the time.

Like all John Marrs novels I’ve read so far, I loved the concept and quickly made my way through the chapters. Unlike previous novels I didn’t become emotionally involved in the story. I think it was because I didn’t get to spend much time getting to know each passenger.

While I understand it was integral to the story that the people who are deciding the fates of the eight unfortunates don’t know much about them, I never felt an urgent need for a specific passenger to survive so I wasn’t as caught up in the drama as I’d hoped.

You don’t need to have read The One to enjoy The Passengers but they’re set in the same world. There are several mentions of Match Your DNA in this book, which won’t mean a lot to you if you haven’t read The One.

“‘What’s not to love about a bit of anarchy?’”

Content warnings are included on my blog.

Contains Spoilers No
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