Featured White Papers
- Enterprise PBX buyer's guide (VoIP-News)
- Webcast: Growing your business with CRM (BNET)
- Hosted CRM comparison guide (Inside CRM)
Crime in brief
Independent on Sunday, The, Jul 13, 2008
Run by Jeff Abbott
Sphere 6.99
Ben Forsborg's wife was murdered on their honeymoon. Two years later, his business card turns up in the wallet of a murdered assassin, and there's a message on his answerphone from the same man. He has no idea why, but suddenly he's the focus of a witch- hunt by Homeland Security. Taut, scary, with enough twists and turns to satisfy the most paranoid conspiracy theorist, this is a winner.
Calumet City by Charlie Newton
Bantam 11.99
Why, oh why do grown men do it? Write crime novels with female narrators, that is. There's something just plain weird about them. Charlie Newton is a fine writer and 'Calumet City' is as hardboiled a novel as any fan could want. It's set in Chicago, where Officer Patti Black, hard as nails, friendless, is the most decorated cop on the force. It just doesn't ring true. All the way through I was just thinking of beefy blokes prancing about in pantyhose.
The Broken Window by Jeffrey Deaver
Hodder 16.99
This is more like it. One of the great detective teams of contemporary crime fiction come storming back. Lincoln Rhyme and Amelia Sachs get involved in a crime close to home as Lincoln's cousin Arthur is arrested for murder. There's lots of skeletons in the cupboard and family secrets galore from their past, but Lincoln takes the case, though reluctantly. Deaver never disappoints, and this novel shines.
Phantom Prey by John Sandford
Simon & Schuster 12.99
John Sandford has never received the success in this country that he deserves. His 'Prey' series is one of the best in US crime. Lucas Davenport, a Minneapolis detective, becomes involved in the underground Goth scene when three young people are murdered. But something doesn't add up, as a young woman appears and vanishes in an almost supernatural way. Possibly the strangest of the series so far, 'Phantom Prey' is a good place to start for the uninitiated.
Copyright c 2008 Independent Newspapers UK Limited. All rights
owned or operated by The Independent.
Provided by ProQuest Information and Learning Company. All rights Reserved.