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It begins with two deaths: a money-man and a grass. Deaths that
offer a unique opportunity to a man like Calum MacLean. A man who
has finally had enough of killing. Meanwhile two of Glasgow's
biggest criminal organizations are at quiet, deadly war with one
another. And as Detective Michael Fisher knows, the biggest - and
bloodiest - manoeuvres are yet to come . . . The stunning
conclusion to Malcolm Mackay's lauded Glasgow Trilogy, The Sudden
Arrival of Violence will return readers to the city's underworld: a
place of dark motives, dangerous allegiances and inescapable
violence . . .
Winner of the Deanston Scottish Crime Book of the Year Award. How
does a gunman retire? Frank MacLeod was the best at what he does.
Thoughtful. Efficient. Ruthless. But is he still the best? A new
job. A target. But something is about to go horribly wrong. Someone
is going to end up dead. Most gunmen say goodbye to the world with
a bang. Frank's still here. He's lasted longer than he should have
. . . The breathtaking, devastating sequel to lauded debut The
Necessary Death of Lewis Winter, How a Gunman Says Goodbye will
plunge you back into the Glasgow underworld, where criminal
organizations war for prominence and those caught up in events are
tested at every turn. Malcolm Mackay's award-winning The Glasgow
Trilogy concludes in The Sudden Arrival of Violence.
A multi-layered and unnerving portrait of gangland Glasgow, For
Those Who Know the Ending is the gripping novel from the
award-winning author of The Glasgow Trilogy, Malcolm Mackay. He has
to clear thoughts of Joanne and thoughts of the past out of his
mind. He has to think about himself, his situation. Think about the
next hour . . . In that hour, everything will be decided. It's been
almost two hours. Two hours, and Martin Sivok is still tied up,
alone in a darkened warehouse; plastic strips digging into the soft
flesh of his wrists. He wants them to come back. Get this over
with. But he also knows that as soon as they return, this could
very well be his ending. Because Martin has messed up. Stolen dirty
money he should never have touched. Dirty money that the Jamieson
organization, the most dangerous criminal outfit in Glasgow, wants
back. Someone has to die for this. And over the next few hours, he
has to work out how that somebody can be anyone but him . . .
The independent kingdom of Scotland flourished until the beginning of the last century. Its great trading port of Challaid, in the north west of the country, sent ships around the world and its merchants and bankers grew rich on their empire in Central America.
But Scotland is not what it was, and the docks of Challaid are almost silent. The huge infrastructure projects collapsed, like the dangerous railway tunnels under the city. And above ground the networks of power and corruption are all that survive of Challaid's glorious past.
Darian Ross is a young private investigator whose father, an ex cop, is in prison for murder. He takes on a case brought to him by a charismatic woman, Maeve Campbell. Her partner has been stabbed; the police are not very curious about the death of a man who laundered money for the city's criminals. Ross is drawn by his innate sense of justice and his fascination with Campbell into a world in which no-one can be trusted.
Scotland has been a proudly independent country for centuries. But
success has now turned sour. Malcolm Mackay's remarkable novel of
crime and corruption is set in a brooding, rain-swept Scottish city
that is compellingly different from the one we think we know. The
Scottish city of Challaid is a corruption-riddled place where
people frequently go off the radar. So when PC Vinny Reno discovers
his ex-wife, Freya, has disappeared, he turns to private detectives
Darian Ross and Sholto Douglas. Their search will lead them to a
collision between Freya and a wealthy banking family. But it also
leads to more questions. What does Freya's disappearance have to do
with a year-old murder case? What is the involvement of a young man
who never leaves his house? As they dig deeper into the past,
Darian and Sholto realise they must stand against the most powerful
people in the city if they are to unearth the truth...
An exciting adventure story and children's allegory about the
realities of death, power and allegiance. Somewhere beyond the
rain, the wind and the stars, and as far from the Earth as it's
possible to be, there was a town so old that no one can remember
how or when it began. It was a town where everyone stayed exactly
the same, a town where no one grew older, a town surrounded by a
million miles of yellow corn, which was so strange that if you went
in, you disappeared immediately. And perhaps Thistown would have
always stayed the same if they hadn't found The Sleeping Man. He
changed everything...Forever.
Winner of the Deanston Scottish Crime Book of the Year Award How
does a gunman retire? Frank MacLeod was the best at what he does.
Thoughtful. Efficient. Ruthless. But is he still the best? A new
job. A target. But something is about to go horribly wrong. Someone
is going to end up dead. Most gunmen say goodbye to the world with
a bang. Frank's still here. He's lasted longer than he should have
. . . The breathtaking, devastating sequel to lauded debut The
Necessary Death of Lewis Winter, How a Gunman Says Goodbye will
plunge you back into the Glasgow underworld, where criminal
organizations war for prominence and those caught up in events are
tested at every turn. Malcolm Mackay's award-winning The Glasgow
Trilogy concludes in The Sudden Arrival of Violence.
Scotland has been a proudly independent country for centuries. But
success has now turned sour. Malcolm Mackay's remarkable novel of
crime and corruption is set in a brooding, rain-swept Scottish city
that is compellingly different from the one we think we know. The
Scottish city of Challaid is a corruption-riddled place where
people frequently go off the radar. So when PC Vinny Reno discovers
his ex-wife, Freya, has disappeared, he turns to private detectives
Darian Ross and Sholto Douglas. Their search will lead them to a
collision between Freya and a wealthy banking family. But it also
leads to more questions. What does Freya's disappearance have to do
with a year-old murder case? What is the involvement of a young man
who never leaves his house? As they dig deeper into the past,
Darian and Sholto realise they must stand against the most powerful
people in the city if they are to unearth the truth...
The astonishing adaptation, by Malcolm McKay, of Max Arthur's
bestselling and acclaimed book, "Forgotten Voices", is based on the
spoken testimony of veterans of the First World War, collected by
the Sound Archive of the Imperial War Museum in 1970. Five ordinary
survivors - four men and one woman - movingly reveal their
memories, which make up a complete narrative of an awesome war.
'Very few men are still alive who fought in the trenches in the
First World War. The words of the soldiers, however, are as fresh
as if they were written yesterday. Extraordinary.' - "The Mail on
Sunday". "Forgotten Voices" will run at the Assembly Theatre,
Edinburgh throughout August, before transferring to the Riverside,
London.
A study focusing on early prehistoric Europe and modern
ethnographic accounts. (BAR -S413, 1988)
"Impeccable Connections: The Rise and Fall of Richard Whitney"
traces the fascinating trajectory of a Massachusetts Brahmin who
was president of the New York Stock Exchange in the early 1930s.
"Whitney fought every attempt by the Federal Government to regulate
the exchange back then because it was "perfect" as it was. Widely
regarded even by patrician friends as an insufferable snob, with a
background from Groton, Harvard, and New Jersey foxhunting country,
after Prohibition he bet all his money on a company called
Distilled Liquors Corporation whose principal product was "New
Jersey lightning" - hard cider. When lightning failed to strike,
this symbol of Wall Street integrity tried to support his company's
stock price by borrowing money and secretly stealing clients'
assets to cover his mounting debts until the scheme finally
collapsed and he went off to prison. A self-righteous confidence
man - he couldn't get away with that today, could he? Read this
spellbinding book, which repeatedly takes your breath away, and
learn that some things never change." -Craig R. Whitney, author of
"Living with Guns: A Liberal's case for the Second Amendment."
"From the opening scene of Richard Whitney striding on to the floor
of the New York Stock Exchange on Black Thursday, 1929 Malcolm
Mackay had me hooked. The story of Whitney's rise and spectacular
fall from grace is one of the great untold stories of American
financial history no more. A fascinating book about one of the
biggest scandals and scoundrels in American finance. Malcolm
Mackay's tale of Richard Whitney's descent from Master of the fox
hunt to prisoner at Sing Sing reads like a novel, but is
unbelievably true " -Consuelo Mack, Anchor and Executive Producer,
Consuelo Mack WealthTrack "Malcolm MacKay has succeeded at the
seemingly impossible task of writing a charming and sympathetic
account of an utterly unsympathetic scoundrel. MacKay writes with
an insider's knowledge of Richard Whitney (whom he personally knew)
and the world in which Whitney lived and worked. The happy result
is financial history at its most vivid and readable. " - James
Grant, editor of Grant's Interest Rate Observer "That Richard
Whitney's extraordinary life of hubris and deceit hasn't been the
subject of a book of nonfiction is a bewildering oversight. Malcolm
MacKay has filled the void with an irresistible account that he was
uniquely qualified to write." -G. Bruce Knecht, author of Grand
Ambition: An Extraordinary Yacht, the People Who Built It, and the
Millionaire Who Can't Really Afford It IMPECCABLE CONNECTIONS is
both a biography of an important figure and an excellent primer on
the reasons for securities regulations that are in today's
headlines. Malcolm MacKay is a lawyer and businessman who, as a boy
and young man, knew Richard Whitney in his post-prison years.
MacKay has thought about Whitney, and why he did what he did, all
his life. A graduate of Princeton and Harvard Law School, he lives
in Brooklyn, New York.
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