|
|
Books > Fiction > Genre fiction > Crime & mystery
When Bunny Carter, the old lady from the Manor House, is discovered
in an open grave, Sophie Sayers is sure it's a case of foul play.
But when it comes to suspects, she's spoiled for choice. One of
Bunny's squabbling children from three different husbands? Petunia
Lot from the Cats Prevention charity, always angling for a legacy?
All these and more had motive and opportunity. But who is to blame?
And can Sophie and her boyfriend, village bookseller Hector Munro,
stop them before they strike again? Previously published by Debbie
Young.
 |
Babylon Berlin
(Paperback)
Volker Kutscher; Translated by Niall Sellar
1
|
R329
R302
Discovery Miles 3 020
Save R27 (8%)
|
Ships in 9 - 17 working days
|
|
|
MEET DETECTIVE GEREON RATH IN THE BOOKS THAT INSPIRED THE HIT TV
SERIES BABYLON BERLIN 'A gripping evocative thriller set in
Berlin's seedy underworld during the roaring Twenties.' -Mail on
Sunday Babylon Berlin is the first book in the
international-bestselling series from Volker Kutscher. Detective
Inspector Gereon Rath is caught up in a web of drugs, sex,
political intrigue, deception and murder as Germany teeters on the
edge of Nazism. In 1929, Berlin is the vibrating metropolis of
post-war Germany, full of bars, brothels and dissatisfied workers.
Arriving in disgrace from Cologne, Gereon Rath is assigned to the
Vice Squad. When a body bearing traces of torture turns up in the
canal, Rath sees a chance to earn his way back into the homicide
division. As he investigates, he discovers a gang of exiled
Russians intent on purchasing arms with smuggled gold - but others
are trying to get hold of the gold... and the guns. Finding himself
up against both paramilitaries and organised criminals, Rath is so
far in over his head that he misuses the insider knowledge of
Charlotte, a typist in the homicide squad, to get ahead in his
investigation. Even though he's falling in love with her. As Rath's
mistakes and enemies pile up, he becomes the prime suspect in the
murder - and he's running out of time to clear his name. About the
Gereon Rath Mysteries 1930s Berlin is a hotbed of vice and
organised crime. When Inspector Gereon Rath leaves Cologne to join
Berlin's murder squad, he cannot begin to imagine the brutality and
complexity of the world he is stepping into as communists and Nazis
struggle for power.
Best known for his gritty urban dramas, American novelis John
Thomas McIntyre's earlier and more romantic works, such as the
Ashton-Kirk series, delved into escapist literature.
Six friends. One remote hotel. A long-overdue reunion. Welcome to The
Hitchcock Hotel...
Alfred Smettle adores Hitchcock.
And who better to become founder, owner and manager of The Hitchcock
Hotel, a remote, sprawling Victorian house sitting atop a hill in the
beautiful White Mountains, New England. There, guests can find movie
props and memorabilia in every room, round-the-clock film screenings,
and an aviary with fifty crows.
For the hotel's first anniversary, Alfred invites the five college
friends he studied film with. He hasn't spoken to any of them in
sixteen years. Not after what happened. But who better to appreciate
Alfred's creation?
His guests arrive, and everything seems to go according to plan. Until
one glimpses someone standing outside her shower curtain.
Another is violently ill every time she eats the hotel food. Then their
mobile phones go missing.
You should always make the audience suffer as much as possible, right?
The guests are stuck in the middle of nowhere, and things are about to
get even worse. After all, no Hitchcock set is complete without a dead
body.
'It is past the half-hour. My time is coming nearer with every tick
of the clock.' Horace Manning, scientist, recluse and 'closed book'
even to his friends is found dead in his study at 4am, following a
dinner in honour of his daughter Helen's engagement. An
ivory-handled carving knife rests between his shoulder blades as
the houseguests gather about to witness the awful crime. The
telephone line has been sabotaged; a calculated murder has been
committed. Rewinding twelve hours, the events of the afternoon and
evening unfold, along with a multitude of motives from a closed
cast of suspects and clues until the narrative reaches 4am again -
then races on to its riveting conclusion at 4pm (twice round the
clock). First published in 1935, this is a lively and unpretentious
mystery thriller and a true lost gem of the Golden Age of crime
writing.
 |
Dead Island
(Paperback)
Samuel Bjork; Translated by Charlotte Barslund
|
R275
R239
Discovery Miles 2 390
Save R36 (13%)
|
Ships in 5 - 10 working days
|
|
|
The latest instalment in the Munch and Krüger series from the
bestselling author of I'm Travelling Alone.
She’d once come here to kill herself but now Mia Kruger has returned to
the picturesque island of Hitra to escape from the violence and madness
of her life as a police investigator.
But when she is approached by 11-year-old Sofia asking for help in
finding her missing friend, her old instincts are awakened. Three years
ago, Jonathan disappeared without a trace on his way home from Sofia's
house. Mia is just beginning to re-examine the cold case when another
crime rocks the island: a teenage girl is found brutally murdered, with
Jonathan's name written in her blood.
Knowing that the two cases are connected but unable to make the link,
Mia calls in her former boss Holger Munch to join the investigation.
When other bodies are discovered, tensions build in the apparently
idyllic community, and Kruger and Munch must quickly learn to navigate
the deadly maze of the island before the elusive killer claims their
next victim.
With characteristic cunning and psychological depth, Samuel Bjork pulls
back a community’s curtain of respectability to reveal the dark web of
treachery and deceit that lies behind it.
Just Like Home is a darkly gothic thriller from nationally bestselling
author Sarah Gailey, perfect for fans of Netflix's The Haunting of Hill
House.
Going home is always hard.
For Vera, going home means returning to the notorious Crowder House
where her serial killer father murdered his victims and buried their
bodies beneath.
Then notes start to appear in Vera's father's handwriting - but they
can't be from him. He has been dead for years.
Vera thought that the house had given up all its secrets but now she
must uncover how deep the rot goes.
 |
Neon Rain
(Paperback)
BURKE JAMES LEE
|
R409
R382
Discovery Miles 3 820
Save R27 (7%)
|
Ships in 18 - 22 working days
|
|
|
NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLING AUTHOR JAMES LEE BURKE THE NEON RAIN Detective Dave Robicheaux has fought too many battles: in Vietnam, with killers and hustlers, with police brass, and with the bottle. Lost without his wife's love, Robicheaux's haunted soul mirrors the intensity and dusky mystery of New Orleans' French Quarter -- the place he calls home, and the place that nearly destroys him when he becomes involved in the case of a young prostitute whose body is found in a bayou. Thrust into the world of drug lords and arms smugglers, Robicheaux must face down a subterranean criminal world and come to terms with his own bruised heart in order to survive.
'A bookshop is a first-rate place for unobtrusive observation,' he
continued. 'One can remain in it an indefinite time, dipping into
one book after another, all over the place.' Mr Richard Dodsley,
owner of a fine second-hand bookshop on Charing Cross Road, has
been found murdered in the cold hours of the morning. Shot in his
own office, few clues remain besides three cigarette ends, two
spent matches and a few books on the shelves which have been
rearranged. In an investigation spanning the second-hand bookshops
of London and the Houses of Parliament (since an MP's new crime
novel Death at the Desk appears to have some bearing on the case),
Ferguson's series sleuth MacNab is at hand to assist Scotland Yard
in an atmospheric and ingenious fair-play bibliomystery.
A SUNDAY POST TOP PICK FOR SUMMER READING 'This latest DCI Daley
thriller is deftly plotted and peopled with sympathetically drawn
local characters and satisfyingly nuanced local wrongdoers' - Irish
Independent When a light aircraft crash-lands at Machrie airport,
DCI Jim Daley and his colleague Brian Scott rush to the scene. But
it soon becomes clear that both occupants of the plane were dead
before take-off ... Meanwhile in Kinloch, local fisherman Hamish is
unwittingly dragged into danger when he witnesses something he
shouldn't, and hotel manager Annie is beginning to suspect her new
boss may not be as he first appeared. And just as Chief
Superintendent Carrie Symington thinks she has finally escaped the
sins of her past, she finds herself caught in an even deadlier
trap. As the action spills across the sea to County Antrim - all
under the scrutiny of the Security Service - the search is on for
any other truth.
Six people land on a desert island ready to make their reality show
debut.
The contestants are hungry to prove themselves. The stakes are high and
losing is not an option. But three weeks and eighteen episodes later,
five of the six contestants sit in a Portuguese police station, and
none of them are winners.
Because twelve million people were watching when Rhys Sutton died on
camera, and someone must pay for the crime.
The best friend, the rival, the girlfriend, the lover, and the sworn
enemy are left standing. And of course, no-one is talking. But how do
you keep secrets when the world has been watching?
Especially when, just a day before his murder, Rhys was the most hated
man on television.
 |
Holding
(Paperback)
Graham Norton
|
R379
R353
Discovery Miles 3 530
Save R26 (7%)
|
Ships in 18 - 22 working days
|
|
|
 |
HEWBRIS
(Paperback)
Ian Macpherson
|
R288
R262
Discovery Miles 2 620
Save R26 (9%)
|
Ships in 9 - 17 working days
|
|
|
Life is good for reformed standup Hayden McGlynn. He's living in
rent-free luxury in London's Kentish Town. His soon-to-be new agent
is the hottest in the business. The rights to his autobiographical
screenplay, set in his native Dublin, have been snapped up. The
future is money. The future is success. The future is Hayden
McGlynn. But Hayden has a problem. Screen Hayden is none other than
Wolfe Swift, The Greatest Actor Of This Or Any Other Age. And Wolfe
Swift, as he prepares for the part, becomes Hayden McGlynn! Is the
world ready for two Haydens? He also has a second problem. He's
committed one murder and got away with it. He hasn't committed a
second murder. What if he gets done for that? Which leads to
problem number three. The screenplay is autobiographical. Has
Hayden inadvertently grassed himself up? Hewbris, a post-postmodern
crime anti-thriller in the same vein as cult classic Sloot, posits
five levels of comedy, lands Hayden with six biological mothers,
and proves the existence of God through a joke. Which came as a
shock to the author.
Present day Paris: Maggie Parker receives a call. The new owners of her
family’s old Notting Hill home are digging up the basement. They’ve no
idea what might lie beneath . . .
London, twenty-one years earlier: teenaged Maggie, babysitting her
little brother, waits in vain for her mother to come home after a night
out. Seeking clues to her mother’s mysterious disappearance, she's
drawn away from the neighbourhood’s grand terraces and into its
hustling backstreets - and the arms of someone else living on their
wits.
Over two decades later, the clock is ticking on a secret set to shatter
Maggie’s grown-up life. But the draw of the past is irresistible . . .
|
|