by Alan Parks ‧ RELEASE DATE: Aug. 3, 2021
A full-bodied immersion into Glasgow’s gritty past.
Overworked Scottish cops probe a strange series of bombings in the mean streets of Glasgow.
April 12, 1974. Detective Harry McCoy and partner Douglas Watson are called to a flat where a “stupid bugger” has blown himself up trying to make a bomb. The bloody crime scene wreaks havoc with McCoy’s weak stomach. Though he’s only 32, the righteous McCoy suffers from a peptic ulcer. Wattie is struggling to adjust to family life: His girlfriend, Mary, a former reporter, has limited patience with his failure to embrace his parenting responsibilities for Duggie, their new baby. Then Andrew Stewart, an American, buttonholes McCoy at the local pub and tries to enlist his help in finding his son, Donny, who’s gone AWOL from the U.S. Navy base, but McCoy says he can't help him; the next morning, though, Stewart talks his way into going along with McCoy on a road trip to Aberdeen to pick up crime boss Stevie Cooper, just released from prison, whose friendship McCoy leverages to obtain valuable info. Their colorful jaunt is cut short by another bombing, this time of a cathedral. Then Cooper becomes the prime suspect in a murder, driving a temporary wedge between Wattie and McCoy. Parks depicts 1970s Glasgow with depth, scope, and authenticity. The pace is deliberate, but the lean, muscular prose is matched by a deep dive into character and the seamy side of the city. When evidence identifies Donny Stewart as a person of interest in the bombings, his absence makes him look guiltier. Links to Northern Ireland hint at a much larger operation and more bombings in the offing.
A full-bodied immersion into Glasgow’s gritty past.Pub Date: Aug. 3, 2021
ISBN: 978-1-60945-687-0
Page Count: 416
Publisher: World Noir
Review Posted Online: May 18, 2021
Kirkus Reviews Issue: June 1, 2021
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by Carter Wilson ‧ RELEASE DATE: Jan. 14, 2025
Better set aside several uninterrupted hours for this toxic rocket. You’ll be glad you did.
A successful Vermont podcaster who’s elicited confessions from dozens of criminals finds herself on the other side of the table, in the hottest of hot seats, over her own troubled past.
Poe Webb was only 13 when she saw her mother, Margaret McMillian, get stabbed to death by the man she’d picked up for a quickie. Poe had vowed revenge, but how could a kid find and avenge herself on a stranger who’d vanished as quickly as he appeared? In the long years since then, Poe’s made a name for herself as a top true-crime podcaster who routinely invites her guests to tell her audience exactly what they did. Now, she’s being pressed, and pressed hard, by Ian Hindley, whose fake name echoes those of England’s Moors Murderers, to join him in a livestream her fans will find riveting because, as Hindley tells her, he’s actually Leopold Hutchins, the pickup who stabbed her mother 14 times when she failed to use her safe word. Skeptical? Hindley knows endless details about the killing that were never released by the police. If Poe won’t do the broadcast, Hindley threatens to harm everyone she loves: her father; her producer and lover, Kip Nguyen; and her black Lab, Bailey. And there’s one more complication that makes the pressure on Poe even more unbearable. Seven years ago, against all odds, she succeeded in tracking Leopold Hutchins from Burlington to New York and killing him herself. In fact, it’s that murder that Hindley most wants her to talk about. Which bully is more fearsome, the man who’s threatening her or the man she killed?
Better set aside several uninterrupted hours for this toxic rocket. You’ll be glad you did.Pub Date: Jan. 14, 2025
ISBN: 9781464226229
Page Count: 448
Publisher: Poisoned Pen
Review Posted Online: Nov. 9, 2024
Kirkus Reviews Issue: Dec. 15, 2024
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by Steve Berry ‧ RELEASE DATE: Feb. 11, 2025
Perhaps the single most striking feature of this latest dose of intrigue is that its title is intended to be taken literally.
The eternal jostling for power in Rome and the Vatican is juiced by a development that attracts the attention of the Magellan Billet and its foremost alumnus, Cotton Malone.
Eric Gaetano Casaburi, secretary of Italy’s National Freedom Party, anticipates a decisive victory for the party if Sergio Cardinal Ascolani, the Vatican’s secretary of state, will lend his full-throated support. Of course, the Church isn’t supposed to meddle in contemporary politics, but Eric makes an offer he doesn’t think Ascolani can refuse. Five hundred years ago, Giuliano di Lorenzo de’ Medici loaned Pope Julius II ten million florins the Church never repaid. That debt is still legally payable to anyone who proves to be a surviving member of the Medici family, and Eric believes he can prove exactly that. Although Malone, called in to investigate the bona fides of Ascolani’s enemy Jason Cardinal Richter, has already found a fortune hidden in Richter’s apartment, Richter swears that he’s being framed, and the violent deaths of three anonymous functionaries seem to bear him out. So, Malone forges a series of alliances with Richter, with wealthy businesswoman Camilla Baines, and ultimately with an even more surprising party to prevent Ascolani and Thomas Dewberry, a hired assassin who’s both a sociopath and a devout Catholic, from swaying the upcoming election in return for Eric’s forgiving the ancient debt. An extended closing note shows how inventively Berry mingled history and fiction to weave this tangled web. Readers invested in learning more about the Medicis can be assured that the brief glimpse of them in a prologue set in 1512 is only the beginning.
Perhaps the single most striking feature of this latest dose of intrigue is that its title is intended to be taken literally.Pub Date: Feb. 11, 2025
ISBN: 9781538770566
Page Count: 416
Publisher: Grand Central Publishing
Review Posted Online: Jan. 18, 2025
Kirkus Reviews Issue: Feb. 15, 2025
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