Whilst detective John Blizzard looks into a series of drug-related deaths, an old nemesis appears who threatens to cloud his judgement.
Frustrated with the slow progress of his colleagues’ investigation into the deaths of several youngsters on his patch, DCI John Blizzard takes over, determined to catch the drug pushers. In so doing, he stumbles across information that might help solve a murder that occurred when he first joined CID.
Many years ago, Des Fairley was shot dead after mouthing off about feared local villain Morrie Raynor. Now with Raynor’s old righthand man on death’s door, delirious, and in hospital, the detective is convinced he will reveal secrets about the unsolved crime.
Suspecting that Raynor, whom he once put behind bars but is now free and at large, is linked to both cases, he rubs fellow officers up the wrong way when he insists on an unusual line of inquiry.
Against the wishes of his superintendent and increasingly at odds with his staff, desperate to catch Raynor, the detective puts the general hospital at the centre of his investigation. But will his instincts prove to be true, or is old age finally getting the better of the veteran crime solver.
If you enjoy murder mysteries full of red herrings and twists, THE SECRETS MAN is for you.
THE SECRETS MAN is the fourth in a series of murder mysteries set in the fictional northern city of Hafton, England.
The full list of books is as
1. THE LONG DEAD 2. STRANGE LITTLE GIRL 3. THE RAILWAY MAN 4. THE SECRETS MAN 5. A BREACH OF TRUST 6. DEATH LIST 7. A FLICKER IN THE NIGHT 8. THE LATCH MAN 9. NO AGE TO DIE 10. THE VENGEANCE MAN 11. THE NAME ON THE BULLET
All of which are available free with Kindle unlimited, and in paperback.
If you enjoy novels by Peter James, Val McDermid and Ian Rankin, or classic detective fiction by Agatha Christie and GK Chesterton, you'll love these books.
John Dean is a freelance journalist who has runs his own business and draws heavily on his years as a crime reporter for newspapers and magazines to create his novels.
He is a member of the Crime Writers’ Association and cites Sherlock Holmes as his all-time favorite detective. He lives in the South West of Scotland.
This is a murder mystery with a strong plot. DCI Blizzard once more goes up against top brass who think his interest in an old criminal who has returned to their patch is taking attention away from cracking a case involving drug deaths that is receiving a lot of media attention. Will the veteran detective's instincts turn out to be correct or is old age catching up with him?
I wish to make it very clear that methadone is a registered and most effective instrument to wean heroin addicts of the drug. They DO NOT GET STONED from it (= why not everyone joins a program) and will very rarely overdose on it as they receive their necessary dose daily and consume this immediately on the premises. Most often it is the COMBINATION of methadone and the ABUSE of other prescription drugs that causes a haze and can lead to a possible death, certainly when mixed with strong liquor. For people who’ve not been prescribed methadone or who are not heroin-addicts, the use IS dangerous and possibly lethal though. Also, I strongly disagree with the stepping stone theory upheld in this book that all heroin (or other hard drugs) addicts started with using cannabis, it does not take into account the millions that experimented with smoking joints but never moved on to other substances. As well don’t forget the multitude who used it once and decided it wasn’t their thing. This is like saying that every alcoholic started by drinking milk. I don to want to promote drug abuse but hell, get realistic!
In little over 6 months, three teenagers from affluent families overdose on a mixture of several drugs, combined with vodka and soda. A chemist must be behind this business but none of the known dealers and snitches has a clue as to whom supplies the kids with these drugs. When DCI John Blizzard visits his friend and mentor George Moore* in hospital, he sees that in the next bed lays an old-time criminal who’s known as “the secrets man”. He’s delusional at the moment and it might be the perfect occasion to wield some long guarded secrets out of the man and solve a cold case murder.
“‘Suffice to say that I’ve got Harry Josephs in a ward at the General, being visited by the likes of Morrie Raynor and Geoff Bates. Geoff Bates a few hours before someone put a bullet in him.’... George reckons that Harry Josephs is ready to spill the beans on a whole host of crimes and I simply cannot ignore that – and neither can you, Max. Think of the clear-ups.’”
Blizzard harbours a long-term hatred for crime boss Morrie Raynor. He managed to put him away for several years but now he’s a free man again. Everyone assumes that he’s an old man now, enjoying his pension but Blizzard is absolutely not convinced
This is the fourth book in the series and can be read as a standalone. Nevertheless, it’s always better if you can read them in the right order for the continuum of the background stories. I read the first two stories quite a while ago but missed out on the previous one. So, sometimes when they spoke about the past, I wasn’t sure if the events were discussed in that book or ‘off-camera’. It’s a bit nit-picking as it doesn’t influence the story or my understanding of it. In the first chapters, there’s a bit of timeline shuffling going on as the book jumps back and forth between 1987, 2004 and now (2018 when this volume was published). You recognise some of the names appearing in different periods, but it takes a long time before I realised how all the events are linked together and how some situations are the consequences of things that happened in the past. DI Blizzard is acerbic and not only in his humour, but there are also moments when his behaviour can be described as boorish. If you’re a suspect, it doesn’t matter if he likes you or not. He’ll dig on till the bottom. His character has grown and become more human throughout the series. At first, he was a real grumpy, rather unpleasant man. The encounter with DC Fee Ellis and their consecutive relationship has had a great influence on his behaviour and moods. Or is it the writer who’s gotten better? If you compare this book with the first in the series, I think that this one is twice as well written, both in suspense as in contents. John Dean has also written another series about DCI Jack Harris that play out in the Pennines with often spectacular nature scenes (well the description there off). This is a police procedural series than effortless can stand next to Peter Robinson’s “DCI Banks” series
*Strange as it is, every time old-timer George Moore talks, I see and hear the voice of Lennard Pearce (from only fools and horses) in my head. I somehow have the feeling this role would have been perfect for him).
1987, Hafton, in northern England. DCI John Blizzard is visiting former DCI George Moore, a retired colleague and mentor, in the hospital when he recognises an elderly man in a nearby bed. It’s Harry Josephs, who had been closely linked to organised crime in the region. Never one to get his own hands dirty, Josephs was nonetheless known as The Secrets Man for his comprehensive knowledge of what went on in the local underworld. But age is a great leveller; now he’s fighting an infection and lying in the ward next to an old adversary. And according to Moore, he is confusing others in the ward for old cronies, and talking to them.
The hospital holds more than its share of memories for Blizzard. One floor above is Lorraine Hennessey, a seventeen-year-old woman lying in a coma. Having overdosed on drugs she’s on life-support; but she’s not been responsive for months, and is just days away from being disconnected from the machines that keep her nominally alive. Blizzard would like very much to find those who put her in that condition and bring them to justice.
When Harry Josephs is visited by some of his old friends they soon realise that his babbling represents a danger to them. They attempt to return to solve the problem late one evening but are rebuffed by the floor nurse, who recognises one of them, and they are forced to leave. But they are not put off so easily.
DCI Blizzard passes Josephs’ bed, and the man calls out to him; he’s mistaken the officer for a man named Des Fairley, an underworld figure who’d been murdered decades earlier. The crime had never been solved, and Blizzard sees an opportunity to bring down the head of the gang, Morrie Raynor. It’s tempting, but as Blizzard will discover, the challenge is not without its dangers.
Scottish-based crime writer John Dean has sixteen novels to his credit to date, most of them featuring DCI John Blizzard, as well as others written as John Stanley. Less well known in America, his books are informed by his experience as a crime reporter and polished by his skills as a teacher of creative writing. The Secrets Man is a well-written police procedural, with a convincing cast of characters and accurate in its depiction of professional policing without slavishly focusing on forensic details, and building toward a compelling climax. Told from multiple points of view, the story widens the readers’ understanding of the broad and lasting impact that crimes can have on those around them. Read one, and you’ll go hunting for the others.
And another convoluted case for Blizzard revolving around suspicious drug deaths. Made even worse when the police have absolutely no idea where the supply is coming from. No pressure then to solve this before the death rate increases. Then we have an ex copper in a hospital ward alongside The Secrets Man of a well know gangster! Amongst all of this, we are getting more and more into the private lives of John and his Sergeant, Colley. Good humorous moments amongst the seriousness of the case.
I rushed through this one before the end of my Kindle Unlimited trail and probably didn't do it justice but it seemed the best of the three in the series that I have read, though not by a large margin.
Another plot with a number of threads and elements of unfinished business jostling for prime position in the investigation.
Loved this series. Hope Mr. Dean has started another one. When I start a new series the characters in the first book are what keeps me coming back. Love John Blizzard and can't wait to see how the grumpy detective copes with fatherhood.
DCI John Blizzard's past comes back to haunt him as criminal Norrie Raynor has been released from jail. He must also deal with an investigation into the deaths of several students by a drugs overdose. An enjoyable well-written crime story
Got the full set of 12. Struggled with the first and second but now getting into Blizzzard's head. The characters are now coming to life. Good storyline is the most important part of the book. I am pleased to say that it is all coming together. On to book 5.
When DCI John Blizzard visits a friend in hospital, he is intrigued by the elderly villain in the next bed, who babbles on about the things he knows about the local criminal gangs. Although most of Blizzard’s colleagues dismiss the ravings of a senile old man, his ramblings attract a number of sinister characters to the ward. Not long after that the old villain is dead, and Blizzard starts to wonder if there was truth to his words after all. Has he been silenced for giving away old gang land secrets?
Meanwhile, Blizzard is occupied with the case of local teenagers who are turning up dead, apparently victims of drugs contaminated with a lethal poison. Is there a connection between these victims, and the killing of a gang land member 40 years ago? Can Blizzard find the dealer selling the lethal gear before any more young people die?
It took me a while to like John Blizzard, who comes across as being yet another cynical and hard-bitten old copper. But he did grow on me after a while. For all his flaws, he is a character trying to do the right thing, for the sake of the young girl on life support who was the first victim of the drug dealer, and for his police woman partner, whom he thinks deserves a man she can be proud of. And in spite of the apparently disparate storylines, the two plot threads tie up neatly at the end, and make for an engrossing read.