Tags
children's literature, code and cipher stories, English teachers, missing persons, Secrecy, thrillers, women authors
I listened to the audio version and really enjoyed the British accents and slang. It becomes a bit complicated and confusing. I think listening provided a better reading experience than reading print for this one.
“The Twyford Code is easily one of the cleverest and most original mystery novels in recent memory.”—BookPage (starred review)
“[I]ngenious… Filled with numerous clues, acrostics, and red herrings, this thrilling scavenger hunt for the truth is delightfully deceptive and thoroughly immersive.” —Publishers Weekly (starred review)
“Hallett continues to pull the rug out from under the reader every time we think we understand what’s going on… It’s complicated, in the best way, and the reveals over the last section of the book are truly gaspworthy… Code lovers rejoice! This one’s for you.”—Kirkus Reviews

