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D.I. Staffe #2

Hevesli Ceset

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Sokaklar güvenli değil

Şehir merkezindeki bir otel odasında bulunan cesedin kimliğine ulaşılmıştı: sosyete fahişesi Elena Danya. Çok geçmeden başka bir seks işçisi daha ölü bulundu. Üstelik kız, Elena’nın arkadaşıydı. Aristokrat bir aileden gelen kötü kız Arabella ise kayıptı. Tesadüfe bakın ki o da Elena’nın arkadaşlarındandı.

Şehrin karanlık yüzü

Kanıtlar röntgenci bir avcıyı işaret etse de müfettiş Will Wagstaffe o kadar emin değildi. Araştırmasını gaddar ve tehlikeli olarak bilinen üç adam üzerinden yürütüyordu: şehirde yaşayan bir banker, Rus mafyasının liderlerinden biri ve Türk bir playboy. Peki gölgelerin ardında saklanan başka güçler olabilir miydi?

Gerçeği öldüremezsiniz

Staffe’ın soruşturması onu ölümcül bölgenin derinliklerine doğru sürüklerken, aniden kendi çevresindeki kadınların da tehdit altında olduğunu fark edecekti.

350 pages, Paperback

First published May 6, 2010

13 people are currently reading
134 people want to read

About the author

Adam Creed

7 books22 followers
Adam Creed was born in Salford and read PPE at Balliol College Oxford before working for Flemings in the City. He abandoned his career to study writing at Sheffield Hallam University, following which he wrote in Andalucia then returned to England to work with writers in prison. He is now Head of Writing at Liverpool John Moores University and Project Leader of Free To Write. He has a wife and two beautiful daughters.

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5 stars
15 (13%)
4 stars
21 (18%)
3 stars
47 (42%)
2 stars
25 (22%)
1 star
3 (2%)
Displaying 1 - 19 of 19 reviews
Profile Image for Nick Davies.
1,739 reviews59 followers
May 15, 2016
As with the previous Adam Creed novel I read, the previous in the DI Staffe series, this was a well-written, often witty and clever, generally better than average police procedural set in London and the South East. Alas though this felt less impressive and less enjoyable than 'Suffer the Children' (#1 in the series) and I'd hence grudgingly give it three and a half out of five.

The main reasons why I was left slightly disappointed were associated with the complicatedness of the plot - starting with the killing of a high-class prostitute, continuing with the disappearance of two other girls she knew, then taking in various posh families, dodgy development deals, switched identities, Eastern European plots. It was all too complicated, imho, and lost me somewhere in the middle. I just didn't quite believe that as complex a network of intersecting plots would actually happen, and the central character solving it all was a bit too inconceivable and superhuman/foolhardy for me. It was still a good read, and many would enjoy it, but I was just slightly put off by some of this.

I was also, slightly oddly, irritated by bad kerning - one of the main characters was called 'Tchancov', but this was printed every time as 'T chancov'. An odd think to irk me, but it irked me every time.
148 reviews
July 13, 2020
Quite a departure from my usual tastes. The genre of crime fiction I think is a bit bland and homogeneous with other titles. You have a murdered body, a suspect, the evidence, then the chase begins.

The plot in "Willing Flesh" I think would be an amazing storyline for avid fans of the genre but for me it was too much to keep track off. The shifting loyalties, the deception, the uncovered truths plus 6 unique characters who intermingle with the others. Call me lazy but ehh. It was a bit overwhelming.

Yeah that's pretty much it a quickie for this entry. Ultimately, I regret going outside my comfort zone but not to fear next on the list we return to our regularly consumed genre. DYSTOPIA !!
Profile Image for Sandra.
Author 12 books33 followers
April 27, 2016
Entertaining as this was - and it was - it was hard to entirely believe in any of the characters. Even Staffe at times seemed too chaotic to be credible. As usual, I wasn't trying too hard to work out what was happening, or who had done what to who, and am also aware that the rich Russians described might be familiar sights in parts of London but are not usually seen around my neck of the woods, which maybe added exotic but increased distance.
But definitely entertaining. Which is why I read.
Profile Image for Rose Maureen.
211 reviews5 followers
December 10, 2016
Another brilliant read of Murder and Mystery, once started. couldn't put it down, Willing flesh ( Di Staffe book 2 ) is a great story, now onto the Authors Pain of Death ( Di Staffe book 3 ) thankyou Adam Creed, I would recommend anyone to read these books.
1,204 reviews1 follower
April 30, 2020
So many common tropes - Russian gangsters, dodgy businessmen, dead young women, prostitute with a heart of gold, conflicted police character - and yet the author manages to create a page turning read.
158 reviews
April 2, 2021
Etwas arg konstruiert und für meinen Geschmack zu chaotisch und zu viele Charaktere.Außerdem scheine ich ein eindeutiges Motiv zu überlesen haben 😏.

War ok, muss aber weitere Bände nicht unbedingt lesen.
Profile Image for Hasret G.
82 reviews
August 13, 2024
Kitap çok karışık ilerledi. Hızlı ve karışık. Bir şeyler oluyor ama ne oluyor anlamadım bile. Kitaptan aklımda hiçbir şey kalmadı. Halbuki konusu da ilgi çekiciydi. Çok fazla karakter koydukları ve odak noktasında sadece bir şüpheli olmadığı için de olabilir.
172 reviews
October 5, 2017
Not bad but I won't be reading the rest of the series:-(
1,544 reviews9 followers
April 4, 2019
Complicated story of murder and revenge. So many plot lines I found it difficult to follow.
Profile Image for Bryngel.
1,921 reviews13 followers
September 26, 2024
I tried. I really tried. It was quite slow and messy. Disappointing.
Profile Image for David.
1,767 reviews2 followers
March 14, 2017
Not as good for me as the first one. The action seemed to wander and either I missed something or some things were assumed without previous reference.
922 reviews18 followers
July 17, 2016
Enjoyable thriller set in London as was the last one 'Suffer the Children'. I read this book not long ago and did find the past characters hard to follow and a bit baffling.

Back Cover Blurb:
A murdered woman is discovered in a City hotel room: Elena Danya, high-end prostitue. Another working girl, her friend, is found dead. Then aristocratic bad-girl Arabella, another friend of Elena's, goes missing.
The evidence points to a voyeuristic predator, but D.I. Wagstaffe is not convinced. Instead his investigation leads towards three ruthless and dangerous men: a City banker, a Russian oligarch and a Turkish playboy. But are even more powerful figures lurking in the shadows?
As Staffe's inquiry takes him deeper into deadly territory suddenly the women in his own life are under threat.....
Profile Image for Terese.
977 reviews30 followers
April 23, 2014
The good:
It's a quick read
It's decently entertaining.... At first

The bad:
The story is far too contrived
The writing is below mediocre (also every 'cum' instead of 'come' drives me up a wall. Also "it's a long chalk" ... Chalk? Really, CHALK?)
I didn't care for D. I Staffe and the choices he made (e.g. witholding evidence, putting a civilian in danger)
Profile Image for Phil James.
416 reviews3 followers
July 14, 2014
Enjoyable thriller set in London. The first I have read by Creed and the second on the series with D.I. Staffe.
Profile Image for Chris Longmuir.
Author 22 books45 followers
April 10, 2012
Traditional crime mystery which starts with the death of a prostitute, quickly followed by more deaths. It was a good, satisfying read.
25 reviews1 follower
January 13, 2014
Enjoyed this murder mystery although maybe a bit too mystery as I'm still a bit baffled as to who & why...
Displaying 1 - 19 of 19 reviews

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