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DI Jon Spicer #6

Cut Adrift: Only the Fittest Will Survive

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Sixth book in the critically-acclaimed Jon Spicer series, also includes the opening of the seventh novel in the series, Sleeping Dogs. Reviews 'I'll be downloading more of Chris Simms' books ASAP. I feel like I've found a hidden gem.' (Amazon Reader Review - Pecking Order)

Chris Simms has been quietly building one of the best police procedural series in this country. (CATHOLIC HERALD)

Pacy, gripping and original storytelling (YORKSHIRE POST)

This highly polished study of madness and murder shows how well Simms' talent is maturing. (SHOTS MAGAZINE)

A must-read for those who like their crime fiction psychological (DEADLY PLEASURES MAGAZINE)

The story's dramatic events are drawn out, gradually building to a page-turning, heart-stopping - and totally unexpected - ending. (THE BOOK PLACE)

The novel's high-quality storytelling has an authentic, documentary feel' (CITY LIFE MAGAZINE)

Book description She is alone on the ocean.

Drifting without hope, she writes her harrowing story on scraps of paper, seals them in anything that will float and casts them from her makeshift raft.

In Manchester, DI Spicer is investigating the brutal slayings of several Russian asylum-seekers. MI5 warn him to back off, but he cannot let the case go - especially once he suspects a link to the series of heart-wrenching notes being washed-up on the British coast.

As he closes in on the truth, he realises - too late - he's now the target of a trained killer who will do anything to protect his master's secret.

About the Author Chris Simms' acclaimed first novel in the DI Spicer series, KILLING THE BEASTS was selected as a Best Crime book for 2005 by SHOTS magazine. He was then selected as a Waterstone's Author for the Future, one of 25 writers tipped by publishers, editors and agents, to produce the most impressive body of work over the next quarter century. Since then he has been nominated several times for the THEAKSTON'S CRIME NOVEL OF THE YEAR and for CRIME WRITERS' ASSOCIATION DAGGERS. Chris lives in Manchester.

Find out more on his official web site, www.chrissimms.info or, for regular postings, see his Facebook page at www.facebook.com/AuthorChrisSimms

382 pages, Paperback

First published May 13, 2010

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About the author

Chris Simms

64 books82 followers
I was born and brought up in rural Sussex, three miles from the nearest shop. Childhood holidays – which lasted for weeks as my dad was a teacher – were spent in a secluded spot in the heart of Exmoor. Sitting round the campfire at night, the haunting cries of owls floating in from the blackness beyond the flames, he would read me the ghost stories of MR James. The short walk to the safety of my tent was always taken at a sprint.
Books that interested me growing up? Plenty of mysteries – especially the Alfred Hitchcock and The Three Investigators series. I also loved Roahl Dahl’s Tales of the Unexpected and read plenty of Pan Horror Stories, too.
Later, it was novels that gave insights into unusual minds: the twisted desires of Frederick in John Fowles’, The Collector; the tormented thoughts of Scobie in Graham Greene’s, Heart of the Matter; the violent urges of Francie in Patrick McCabe’s, Butcher Boy all had a major influence.
After school and university came a series of abysmal jobs punctuated by travelling. Quite a lot of travelling, actually. Then, just after my 30th birthday, the idea for my first novel came to me. I was broken down on the hard shoulder of a motorway in the early hours of the morning, waiting for a rescue vehicle to arrive. It’s about the driver of a van who roams the roads in the dead of night, looking for stranded motorists to murder…
Ideas for subsequent novels have occurred at all sorts of odd moments: glimpsing a derelict church from the window of a moving train; browsing a newspaper report about a walker who claimed he’d been attacked by a panther; half-reading a doctor’s surgery article on how some tinnitus sufferers don’t hear whistles or buzzes – they’re tormented by birdsong; listening to a radio program about a flotilla of yellow ducks that fell from a cargo ship and floated slowly across the Atlantic.

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Displaying 1 - 12 of 12 reviews
Profile Image for comfort.
612 reviews96 followers
September 27, 2017
Quite a sad story of refugees who have been set adrift on a raft. Series of letters are received all along the coast of the UK housed in little rubber duckies written by one of the refugees, obviously. It tells of their plight and running out of food and water and people dying.
The newspapers get wind of these letters and it becomes apparent that they are numbered, so the story emerges. Some people, of course, think that they are false and someone is duping the country.
This is only a very small part of this story (but the part that stuck out in my mind). It is also the story of dead Russians and mistaken identity and much more.
Profile Image for Florita.
127 reviews1 follower
February 24, 2025
UK setting. Ship goes overboard but there is a raft where fugitives try to survive. A bunch of rubber ducks are released and this lady from Iran that fled puts notes in them in English. Meanwhile the DI on this is going through a separation with his wife that now has a new bf which is a psychologist. He is a dick. DI Spicer is trying to get. her back but becomes a bit of a stalker. It is about something in history when they stole tons of money when they were shipping some machine back to the US saying it is broken. Money was on that load and it goes into the ocean. KGB and CIA people are not good ppl.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Sue Morris.
82 reviews
November 2, 2021
Exceptionally good

I have read and enjoyed all this series but this particular book is outstanding in my opinion. It helps to read the series from the start through to understand the background of the characters. I so cringe at times at the behavior of the main character DO Spicer, but his flawed personality makes the storyline more real and interesting. I'll be the way the author also links the story lines to real life events. Thoroughly enjoyable and fascinating from start to finish.
3 reviews
December 18, 2020
Real page turner, from start to finish

Another great book by Chris Simms in the DI Spider series, can't wait to start the next one which I'm sure will be equally as enjoyable.
8 reviews
November 19, 2021
Gripping read

I've read a few books by this author,all have been good but this one was deeper, with strong characters and intriguing p!ot. Give it a go!
Profile Image for Katie Mineeff.
Author 4 books4 followers
January 21, 2015
This was a great book! It was a must read in the series after reading its predecessor but could easily be a stand-alone read. The premise of messages from a lost soul at sea was captivating and the human face of the asylum plight within the floating letters was well developed. As with the whole of the DI Jon Spicer series, the characters were multi-faceted, certainly not without their faults and as such believable. A book I'd recommend to anyone interested in crime suspense, issues currently in the global spotlight or human relationships.
Profile Image for Sandra.
Author 12 books33 followers
January 3, 2016
I started reading this in the library in the interests of 'research'. Ran out of time but really wanted to know what happened so had to buy the book and thoroughly enjoyed it as a well-written, engaging drama, intricate plot, plenty tension and human relationships.
I'll seek out more by Chris Simms
Profile Image for Anita.
44 reviews5 followers
August 4, 2016
A very moving story that focuses on the plight of refugees & the state of affairs in Iraq. Murders in Manchester are linked to the story of people swept overboard from a ship. The letters written by one of these people are what make the book so fascinating.
81 reviews
December 16, 2015
My favorite!

This was the most compelling of all the DI Spicer books I've read so far. He has a way of developing the characters so you see the entire picture of their lives. This is my favorite because he has taken truth about our history and combined it with fiction.
Profile Image for Jill Mccann.
29 reviews5 followers
December 16, 2013
Tight atmospheric writing about one of the biggest crimes of recent years - the invasion and sacking of Iran.
Displaying 1 - 12 of 12 reviews

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