She’s gone, but she still wants revenge The wife of David Hunter died in a tragic riding accident two years ago, leaving him a very rich man. Now a senior partner in a large Norwich legal firm, he is attracted to new paralegal, Abigail Graham. They date, but two weeks later she goes missing. DS Sharma and DC Jackson are treating Abigail as a missing person. This is in spite of Hunter’s claim that she is a thief who stole money from him, and the main reason why she has absconded. Sharma is sceptical of Hunter’s story as it is so out of character for the missing woman, but if true, is there more to Abigail than she realises?
Looking for Abigail is the second book in the cracking Norfolk-based crime series featuring detectives Yami Sharma and Steve Jackson.
Iain Cameron was born in Glasgow, Scotland and moved south to Brighton in the early eighties.
He has worked as a management accountant, business consultant and a nursery goods retailer. He now lives in a village outside Horsham in West Sussex with his wife, two daughters and a lively Collie.
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Some years ago I had the good fortune to spend a week in Norwich visiting my brilliant niece Violet Kupersmith, who was a visiting fellow at UEA. Not only had I the opportunity to view some of the most extreme examples of the British Brutalist school of architecture, as well as a campus populated by innumerable rabbits (I hope the bunnies have not all succumbed to this new disease), but it was Holy Week and I could participate in the services at the Cathedral, which I was quite pleased figured in novel, as well as other sights I recall.
We have a partner in a Norwich legal firm specialising in property who acquired his position by inheritance when his wife was killed in a riding accident, with some rumours about that it may not have been entirely accidental. And into the firm enters a new employee, the very attractive and smart Abigail Graham, who gives this book its title, and may be just a little too perfect to be quite who she is supposed to be. My only quarrel with this this book is that I found her much more engaging and interesting than with of the detectives who are supposed to be the main characters of the series. If she reappears in another book, I quite want to read it.