Linwood Barclay
Author of No Time for Goodbye
About the Author
Linwood Barclay was born in the United States, but moved to Canada just before turning four years old. He received a B.A. in English from Trent University in Peterborough, Ontario. He worked for the Peterborough Examiner before joining the Toronto Star in 1981. He held such positions as assistant show more city editor, chief copy editor, news editor, and Life section editor, before becoming the paper's humor columnist in 1993. On June 28, 2008, he wrote his last column announcing his retirement from the Star. He is the author of both fiction and non-fiction works including Last Resort; Bad Move; Bad Guys; Lone Wolf; Stone Rain; No Time for Goodbye; Too Close to Home; Fear the Worst; and Never Look Away. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
Image credit: Linwood Barclay in Toronto, 4 septembre 2012
Series
Works by Linwood Barclay
Linwood Barclay - five great novels : No time for goodbye, Too close to home, Fear the worst, Never look away, The accident (2013) 1 copy
Far From Home 1 copy
Tap pn the Window 1 copy
Noodsein 1 copy
Niemand hoort je 1 copy
Associated Works
Books to Die For: The World's Greatest Mystery Writers on the World's Greatest Mystery Novels (2012) 278 copies, 10 reviews
Reader's Digest Select Editions: Crossfire | Minding Frankie | Never Look Away | The Genesis Plague (2011) 6 copies
Reader's Digest Select Editions 2011 v04 #316: Never Look Away / Promise Me / Lipstick in Afghanistan / I Still Dream About You (2011) 6 copies
Reader's Digest Select Editions: The Overlook • The Last Testament • Left For Dead • No Time For Goodbye (2007) 5 copies
Het Beste Boek 252: Zonder een woord / Het strandpaviljoen / In Gods naam / Weehuis El Girasol 2 copies, 1 review
Reader's Digest Select Editions: Never Look Away / Minding Frankie / The Genesis Plague / The Summer of the Bear (2011) 2 copies
Livros Condensados: Nem Um Adeus | Magias De Jardim | Juiz E Juri | Amor E Dr. Devon (2007) 2 copies
Het Beste Boek 276: Kijk niet weg / Zoet ongeluk / Niets blijft verborgen / De intrigant (2012) 1 copy
Australian Reader's Digest Select Editions: The Overlook / No Time for Goodbye / The Last Testament / Garden Spells (2007) 1 copy
Livros Condensados: Nunca pare de olhar | O jardineiro francês | O mal da criação | Um cavalo me escolheu (2011) — Author — 1 copy
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Birthdate
- 1955-03-20
- Gender
- male
- Education
- Trent University (Peterborough)
- Occupations
- assistant city editor
chief copy editor
news editor
Life section editor
Humour Columnist
author - Organizations
- Toronto Star
- Relationships
- Barclay, Neetha (Wife)
Barclay, Spencer (Son)
Barclay, Paige (Daughter) - Short biography
- At the age of 22, Linwood left the resort and got his first newspaper job, at the Peterborough Examiner.
In 1981, he joined the Toronto Star, Canada’s largest circulation newspaper. For twelve years he held a variety of editing positions, then became the paper’s humour columnist in 1993. A few thousand columns later, he retired from the paper in 2008 to write books full-time.
After writing four comic thrillers featuring the character Zack Walker, Linwood turned to darker, standalone novels, starting with No Time for Goodbye, which became an international hit. The novel has been translated into nearly forty languages, was the single bestselling novel in the UK in 2008, and has been optioned for film by Eric McCormack. Since then, all of Linwood’s novels have appeared on bestseller lists, and more his books have been optioned.
Linwood studied English Literature at Trent University. He was fortunate to have some very fine mentors; in particular, the celebrated Canadian author Margaret Laurence, whom Linwood first met while she was served as writer-in-residence at Trent, and Kenneth Millar, who, under the name Ross Macdonald, wrote the acclaimed series of mystery novels featuring the private eye Lew Archer.
It was at Trent where he met his wife Neetha. They have been married more than thirty years, and have two children, Spencer and Paige. - Nationality
- Canada
- Places of residence
- Burlington, Ontario, Canada
Toronto, Ontario, Canada - Associated Place (for map)
- Ontario, Canada
Members
Discussions
Reviews
"Trust Your Eyes" is another solid read from Linwood Barclay who really ought to be more well known. Probably one of the reasons he isn't is that he doesn't currently use a series character (he did in his early days) and there isn't quite the same compulsion to pick up the next one when you're not following a longer character arc. For instance, here I am in 2013 only now catching up on 2011's "Trust Your Eyes", even though I read and enjoyed 4 earlier Barclay novels in a fast discovery sweep show more back in early 2011.
The setup here is that there are two brothers. Ray is an illustrator for print and web journalism and Thomas is a recluse with issues that are described and treated as a type of schizophrenia but who otherwise seems to be very high on the functioning autism spectrum and is on a compulsive quest to memorize all the houses and streets of the cities of the world by using a web interface called Whirl360 which is used as the proxy name for what most of us would know as Google Streetview.
With a modern-day twist on Hitchcock's "Rear Window", the plot driver is that Thomas sees what appears to be a murder captured through a chance streetview photo capture and he asks his brother to check into it with an actual site visit. This kicks off a conspiracy that endangers the brothers in unexpected ways.
Barclay has a knack for writing a compulsive read as he is constantly leaving unanswered questions (which are thankfully resolved by the end) and dropping in unexpected twists at the end of chapters. You just have to keep turning the pages to find out what happens next. "Trust Your Eyes" is yet one more guaranteed must-read-right-to-the-end thriller. I don't think I'll wait quite so long to pick up the next one or two (the one good thing about being a lazy author-fan is that you know there are always a few good books waiting for you in the pipeline ;) show less
The setup here is that there are two brothers. Ray is an illustrator for print and web journalism and Thomas is a recluse with issues that are described and treated as a type of schizophrenia but who otherwise seems to be very high on the functioning autism spectrum and is on a compulsive quest to memorize all the houses and streets of the cities of the world by using a web interface called Whirl360 which is used as the proxy name for what most of us would know as Google Streetview.
With a modern-day twist on Hitchcock's "Rear Window", the plot driver is that Thomas sees what appears to be a murder captured through a chance streetview photo capture and he asks his brother to check into it with an actual site visit. This kicks off a conspiracy that endangers the brothers in unexpected ways.
Barclay has a knack for writing a compulsive read as he is constantly leaving unanswered questions (which are thankfully resolved by the end) and dropping in unexpected twists at the end of chapters. You just have to keep turning the pages to find out what happens next. "Trust Your Eyes" is yet one more guaranteed must-read-right-to-the-end thriller. I don't think I'll wait quite so long to pick up the next one or two (the one good thing about being a lazy author-fan is that you know there are always a few good books waiting for you in the pipeline ;) show less
The book centers around con artist ‘psychic’ Keisha Ceylon. She lives with her dead-beat boyfriend Kirk, who I hated, and her young son Matthew. I thought it was quite clear from the start that Keisha is motivated by financial means to "trick" the bereaved into hearing what they want to hear. My first thought was "How does this woman sleep at night?". Then it became evident her tricks were soon to be catching up with her. The question then becomes what happens when the scammer is show more scammed? Overall this is an intense psychological thriller, slightly different than Barclay's usual fare, but filled with shady characters. It's a cleverly done story and a very satisfying read. show less
A NOISE DOWNSTAIRS is a creepy, twisty, and addictive thriller. One night professor Paul Davis stumbles across a colleague attempting to dispose of two bodies along a desolate road; eight months later, Paul is still suffering with the trauma. To lift his spirits, his wife buys him an old-fashioned typewriter in hopes that he’ll start writing again. But, poor Paul, late at night he’s the only one who can hear the typewriter’s keys tapping away on their own, and he’s convinced it had show more something to do with the double murder eight months ago.
I flew through this book it was so good! The mystery of the noise downstairs had me freaking out. I would be terrified to think my typewriter was possessed. This was a suspenseful, multi-layered mystery, and all the parts came together skillfully. One particular twist toward the end had me floored. Wha??? I had to reread it a couple of times to make sure it really happened. Weeks after reading this book, I’m still stunned! Wow. This is the first book by Linwood Barclay I’ve read, and I’m already a fan. show less
I flew through this book it was so good! The mystery of the noise downstairs had me freaking out. I would be terrified to think my typewriter was possessed. This was a suspenseful, multi-layered mystery, and all the parts came together skillfully. One particular twist toward the end had me floored. Wha??? I had to reread it a couple of times to make sure it really happened. Weeks after reading this book, I’m still stunned! Wow. This is the first book by Linwood Barclay I’ve read, and I’m already a fan. show less
Annie Blunt has had a catastrophic year. Her husband was killed in a tragic hit-and-run accident, and then one of her children's books — she's a writer and illustrator — ignited a public scandal when a young reader died attempting to mimic something from its pages. Battered and desperate for a clean start, she moves with her son Charlie to a quiet rental house in the small upstate New York town of Lucknow. The plan is simple: heal, regroup, figure out what's next. It does not go show more according to plan. Charlie, bored and lonely in their new surroundings, discovers a locked shed on the property. Inside: an old, forgotten train set. He's delighted. Annie is less sure — there's something about the toy she can't put her finger on, something that makes her uneasy.
Strange sounds begin waking her in the night — a train whistle, distinct and close, despite there being no active track for miles. An unsettling new character keeps appearing in Annie's sketchbook, drawn by her own hand, that has no business being in a children's book. And then bodies start turning up around town, mangled and bloody, each death occurring on a night the whistle was heard. Meanwhile Police Chief Harry Cook is trying to make sense of disappearances, mutilated bodies, a mysterious new train shop that appeared out of nowhere in town, and an eccentric proprietor who calls himself Mr. Choo. Barclay's first horror novel, inspired by his own model train obsession and read in early draft by Stephen King, who loved it. Told across multiple timelines.
[May contain spoilers]
The train set is genuinely, supernaturally evil — this is not metaphor or hallucination. The trains have a will of their own and are capable of causing real deaths, with the whistle serving as both a warning and a signal. The various timelines converge in the back half to reveal the history of the train set and how it came to be in that shed. The mysterious Mr. Choo and his shop are deeply central to understanding what the trains are and want. The ending delivers on the escalating dread and ties the timelines together in ways readers found satisfying.
What I think: This is Barclay doing something genuinely new — swapping his sharp domestic thriller instincts for supernatural horror, and the result is atmospheric and genuinely creepy. The small-town setting works perfectly, the child-in-danger thread gives it immediate stakes, and the evil train concept is more unsettling than it has any right to be. It does start slowly and the supernatural rules take a while to clarify. Probably a 3.5 to 4 from you — you've shown solid tolerance for supernatural elements when they're handled well, and this one earns its chills. show less
Strange sounds begin waking her in the night — a train whistle, distinct and close, despite there being no active track for miles. An unsettling new character keeps appearing in Annie's sketchbook, drawn by her own hand, that has no business being in a children's book. And then bodies start turning up around town, mangled and bloody, each death occurring on a night the whistle was heard. Meanwhile Police Chief Harry Cook is trying to make sense of disappearances, mutilated bodies, a mysterious new train shop that appeared out of nowhere in town, and an eccentric proprietor who calls himself Mr. Choo. Barclay's first horror novel, inspired by his own model train obsession and read in early draft by Stephen King, who loved it. Told across multiple timelines.
[May contain spoilers]
The train set is genuinely, supernaturally evil — this is not metaphor or hallucination. The trains have a will of their own and are capable of causing real deaths, with the whistle serving as both a warning and a signal. The various timelines converge in the back half to reveal the history of the train set and how it came to be in that shed. The mysterious Mr. Choo and his shop are deeply central to understanding what the trains are and want. The ending delivers on the escalating dread and ties the timelines together in ways readers found satisfying.
What I think: This is Barclay doing something genuinely new — swapping his sharp domestic thriller instincts for supernatural horror, and the result is atmospheric and genuinely creepy. The small-town setting works perfectly, the child-in-danger thread gives it immediate stakes, and the evil train concept is more unsettling than it has any right to be. It does start slowly and the supernatural rules take a while to clarify. Probably a 3.5 to 4 from you — you've shown solid tolerance for supernatural elements when they're handled well, and this one earns its chills. show less
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