Sidney Sheldon's Angel of the Dark
by Tilly Bagshawe, Sidney Sheldon
Why You'll Love This
A murdered billionaire, a globe-spanning manhunt, and a story pulled from Sidney Sheldon's private archives — this one was always meant to exist.
- Great if you want: glamorous, fast-moving thriller with wealth, secrets, and betrayal
- The experience: propulsive and escapist — each chapter pulls you into the next
- The writing: Bagshawe mirrors Sheldon's plot-first, sharp-dialogue style convincingly
- Skip if: you prefer psychological depth over plot-driven suspense
About This Book
When a billionaire is found brutally murdered and his young, beautiful wife has no memory of the night it happened, the questions that follow are as dangerous as they are irresistible. In Sidney Sheldon's Angel of the Dark, a son's desperate search for the truth behind his father's death pulls him across continents and into a world of wealth, obsession, and deadly secrets. The stakes are personal and the danger is real — but it's the mystery at the heart of the story, a woman who seems both victim and cipher, that keeps the pages turning long past any reasonable bedtime.
Tilly Bagshawe channels Sheldon's signature blend of jet-set glamour and psychological tension with genuine skill, drawing on material from his private archives to craft something that feels authentically of a piece with his catalog. The prose moves fast and the plotting is tight, with the kind of sharp, confident storytelling that trusts readers to keep up. For fans of Sheldon's original novels, this reads less like imitation and more like continuation — the same electric pacing, the same irresistible pull toward the next reveal.