The Man
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Verve Books
Publishing:23rd Jul '26
£10.99
This title is due to be published on 23rd July, and will be despatched as soon as possible.

The photos Judith Stanley takes are just for her, a private passion to fill her suburban days. But when she shares them with Paul Sorenson, her new photography instructor, she's unprepared to hear his astonished praise. 'Stunning,' he calls her photos. 'Extraordinary.' She has an uncanny eye, he says, and should consider publication. He could help. Except Judith has no interest in sharing her work; in fact, the mere idea of it frightens her.
Still, emboldened by Paul's encouragement, Judith ventures out beyond her quiet neighbourhood to the city in search of increasingly striking images. When she starts to notice the dark shape of a man in the corner of her self-portraits, Judith is certain he's an attacker from her past. She doesn't know why he has returned, but she's sure of his presence: the hoarse sound of his breathing, his hard grip on her elbow. Perhaps it would appease the man if she were to put her camera down and give up her private passion. But she can't; she refuses. Until one night when the man finally emerges from the shadows, and Judith's story suddenly and irrevocably becomes his own.
Chilling and heart-poundingly propulsive, The Man is a phenomenal and timely novel exploring the inescapable fear of living as a woman, the tantalizing seduction of artistic freedom and the very real dangers that lurk both inside and outside the confines of the mind.
Haunting, atmospheric and relentlessly unnerving, The Man kept me up late reading - and had me looking over my shoulder at dark corners. Beneath the muscular prose and quiet sense of dread is a thoughtful exploration of power imbalances, our relationship with art and the roles we allow women to play -- Andrea Bartz, author of We Were Never Here and The Last Ferry Out
I loved Laura Sims's previous books and The Man is just as bold and original, and layered with the obsessive atmosphere of a Hitchcock film or a Patricia Highsmith novel
-- Jo Leevers, author of The Museum of Second ChancesI loved this book as I love all of Sims's novels. So eerie and sharp, so classic feeling yet contemporary. I think of Highsmith and Hitchcock when it comes to her gift for suspense and dark Americana, but she also has a poet's eye and ear for conjuring visceral dread, vulnerability and beauty in equal measure. A brilliant portrait of a deeply haunted, gifted woman - and a haunting shadow of a man. Maybe my favorite of hers -- Mona Awad, author of We Love You, Bunny
With elegant and propulsive prose, The Man is a chilling page-turner that explores art, ambition, gender dynamics and true fear. Creepy, disturbing and dripping with dread, I had to force myself to put it down -- Robyn Harding, author of Strangers in the Villa
Fiercely intelligent and deeply chilling, The Man - like the protagonist's self-portraiture - contains more than first meets the eye. It's the sort of novel I immediately want to talk about with others - the perfect book club read. I wish I could read it again for the first time! -- Ana Reyes, author of The House in the Pines
ISBN: 9780857309501
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
288 pages