
Deep Water
by Patricia Highsmith (1957)
Similar to The Kellerby Code, this explores dark psychological depths and unsettling relationships.

by Jonny Sweet (2024)
Edward is living in a world he can't afford and to which he doesn't belong. To camouflage himself, he has catered to his friends' needs: fetching drycleaning, sorting flowers for premieres. It's a noble effort, really - anything to keep his perfectly awful 'best pals' Robert and Stanza happy. In return, his proximity to their abundance might sponge the shame of his birth and violent past cleanly away. But Edward has - secretly - been in love with Stanza since their Cambridge days. The shattering discovery that Stanza and Robert are an item pushes him too far. His little acts of kindness take a sinister turn, giving way to the unspeakable brutality Edward fears is at his core. Are there limits to what he will do for his friends? Are there limits to what he will do to them?
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by Patricia Highsmith (1957)
Similar to The Kellerby Code, this explores dark psychological depths and unsettling relationships.

by John le Carre (1986)
If you appreciated the intricate character study in The Kellerby Code, this offers complex espionage and identity themes.

by Shirley Jackson (1948)
Like The Kellerby Code, these stories delve into the unsettling undercurrents of seemingly normal lives.

by Joseph Mitchell (1992)
For the observational depth that inspired The Kellerby Code, this offers exquisite, fragmented accounts of people and places.
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