10,99 €
inkl. MwSt.
Versandkostenfrei*
Versandfertig in über 4 Wochen
payback
5 °P sammeln
  • Broschiertes Buch

On a sun-drenched Caribbean island, a group of teenagers share cigarettes, secrets, and the illusion that nothing can touch them. For Nari, Marcus, Lonen, Reye, and their tight-knit circle, The Path is their sanctuary--a ritual escape before the school bell rings. But the trust they place in their charming teacher, Mr. Knoll, is slowly and deliberately exploited. Under the guise of mentorship, he draws them in--his attention flattering, his encouragement intoxicating, his control insidious. The study sessions blur. The boundaries bend. And by the time unease takes root, the damage has already…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
On a sun-drenched Caribbean island, a group of teenagers share cigarettes, secrets, and the illusion that nothing can touch them. For Nari, Marcus, Lonen, Reye, and their tight-knit circle, The Path is their sanctuary--a ritual escape before the school bell rings. But the trust they place in their charming teacher, Mr. Knoll, is slowly and deliberately exploited. Under the guise of mentorship, he draws them in--his attention flattering, his encouragement intoxicating, his control insidious. The study sessions blur. The boundaries bend. And by the time unease takes root, the damage has already begun. As the Vietnam War simmers just beyond the horizon and the island's adults avert their eyes, the students stay close, their trust deepening even as the truth threatens to unravel everything. What begins as admiration ends in reckoning. Lyrical and haunting, What Killed Mr. Knoll is not a whodunit, but a story of complicity, betrayal, and the quiet devastation caused by those who hide harm behind charm.
Autorenporträt
Nanette L. Avery writes with a keen eye for what people hide and a deep love for what words reveal. Her fiction is layered, lyrical, and laced with the kind of truths that linger long after the final page. Having spent formative years in the Virgin Islands, she brings a vibrant sense of place and quiet observation to every story. From the acclaimed Orphan in America to the haunting depths of The Colony, Avery's work traverses memory, history, and emotional fault lines with wit, grace, and unexpected turns. She lives outside Nashville, Tennessee, watches subtitled films like they're love letters from another life, and believes the most powerful lines are the ones that almost don't say everything.