The truth was buried along with their bodies . . . until now.
FROM THE CREATOR OF BBC DRAMA SILENT WITNESS , COMES A GRIPPING AND SINISTER THRILLER THAT WILL HAVE YOU ON THE EDGE OF YOUR SEAT.
During the murder investigation of a teenage boy, DCI Mark Lapslie's methods come under fire and, as a result, his prime suspect walks free. Meanwhile another body is discovered and Lapslie and his team quickly find themselves on the trail of a voracious serial killer.
One year earlier, dedicated young journalist, Josie Dallyn stumbles over a chain of very similar cases. Whilst she is digging deeper and deeper into the truth behind the mysterious deaths, she is getting herself into more danger than she could have ever anticipated and her life is being threatened by some very dark forces.
Nigel Colin McCrery was an English screenwriter, producer and writer. He was the creator of the long-running crime dramas Silent Witness (1996–present) and New Tricks (2003–2015).
I love Nigel McCrey and DCI Mark Lapslie - but for some reason I had a difficult time with this one. A lot of history and jumping back and forth... I think my main problem with the book though is that I do not like court room scenes.... and the first part of the book is a court room scene - 2 trials in fact. So that is just a personal idiosyncrasy that I have. I hope Mr. McCrery writes more Mark Lapslie novels though.... but no court room scenes and no having everyone against Lapslie ....lol Just a good mystery that Lapslie can sink his teeth into
DCI Mark Lapslie #5, not sure if I have read any others in this series. It seemed to be a normal police procedural, but it really dragged on. 422 pages is too long. Also I began to be turned off by the subject matter, and furthermore, I'm not fond of these power clique conpiracy stories. I think I am just out of sorts. It's a DNF, so no rating, but I might try to find one of the earlier ones to see if it is any more palatable.
Great book with a different storyline and I loved it! Not realising it's a book in a series, it makes for a good stand alone book, it wasn't difficult to follow and the character relationships were good.
I was only miffed at the last 20 pages, they disagree with me. I admit I had some suspicions around Scobe but it was too quick and an overload of information
Enjoyable read which admittedly has taken me a few months to get through dipping in and out. Found some of the time jumps rather confusing. Enjoyed the twist revealed in the epilogue regarding a certain officer’s nickname.
Convinced that a child killer is behind bars, DCI Lapslie and his team work a case of confusion as another child is found murdered in the same manner. The team find links to historical murders going back 500 years and discover a group of ritualistic killers sacrificing young boys for the memory of their ancestors. A good storyline in how individuals were framed and how it impacted the justice side. However, it was a slightly far fetched story.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.