Jump to ratings and reviews
Rate this book

DCI David Fyfe #2

Sleeping Pretty

Rate this book
Fyfe was in a good mood. The world was a pleasant place. In the inside pocket of his suit jacket was his resignation letter, carefully phrased around mysterious and unspecified personal reasons. That would get them wondering… The letter was kept in an unsealed envelope so that when the moment came he could write in the date and slap it down. The moment had to be right. Meanwhile, he was enjoying his life as it was and the envelope was getting ragged around the edges.

Edinburgh’s Detective Chief Inspector David Fyfe is a middle-aged police detective with a fondness for the easy way out… So, when the opportunity arises to escape Edinburgh’s usual urban confusion for a murder-suicide in a sleepy village in the Scottish Highlands, he can’t resist.

Fyfe discovers that the case he’ll be overseeing is being led by a young female detective inspector and he promises to give her—er, the case—his full attention. Unfortunately, peppered with false leads and a growing number of murder victims, the investigation gets more dangerous by the hour, forcing DCI Fyfe and DI McBain to put business before pleasure.

Sleeping Pretty is the second book in the DCI David Fyfe series. Full of suspense, this is a fast-moving, wryly humorous and expertly plotted detective novel.

‘Fyfe's engrossing ruminations on the human condition [means] readers will find themselves absorbed from beginning to end’ - Booklist

William Paul is a journalist in Edinburgh, where he lives with his wife and their two sons. He has also authored a number of other books, including Seasons of Revenge and The Lion Rampant .

215 pages, Paperback

First published May 1, 1996

27 people are currently reading
25 people want to read

About the author

William Paul

123 books2 followers
Born and brought up in the east of Scotland, William Paul is a former journalist who now earns a living in digital communications but reverts to old-fashioned reporting most weekends by covering rugby matches in both print and digital format.

He's been writing since an early age - somewhere in the attic is a picture of a fresh-faced youth with his first royalty cheque - and sees no reason to stop now.

He got married along the way, has two sons and grandson Aidan to cope with.

His ideas for books come at him from all angles and sometimes he finds it difficult to get all that stuff down on the page before it fades, morphs into something entirely different or simply vanishes from his unreliable memory. Wherever and however ideas end up - on the page or in the bin - they just keep coming.

.

Ratings & Reviews

What do you think?
Rate this book

Friends & Following

Create a free account to discover what your friends think of this book!

Community Reviews

5 stars
30 (28%)
4 stars
41 (39%)
3 stars
25 (23%)
2 stars
7 (6%)
1 star
2 (1%)
Displaying 1 - 7 of 7 reviews
767 reviews3 followers
October 20, 2024
Edinburgh’s Detective Chief Inspector David Fyfe is a brilliant, middle-aged police detective with a fondness for the easy way out. “Not a soul suspected that he, a respected detective chief inspector of police, was a common thief. His past record made interesting reading. But what worried Fyfe most was that it didn’t worry him at all.” He’s still tied to the Fraud Squad, cut off from major cases because of that lax attitude toward policing. A Superintendent from Inverness taps him to work on a “difficult case” murder in the Scottish Highlands being overseen by a young, female officer who the powers that be think may not be up to the challenge. Due to a surplus of false leads and mushrooming victims, the investigation gets more and more dangerous.

Minuses: It took the author nine chapters to bring Fyfe into the story, almost losing me, but I was on the elliptical at the gym and didn’t want to pick a new book. Plus, I really liked Fyfe from the first book and I kind of wanted to see how this story went.

Pluses: The relationship between Fyfe and the DI was interesting, with some long term potential, if he can just figure out what to do with his ex-wife, whom he is back in a relationship with. His dogs (a mother/daughter Black Lab duo) are back on the investigative trail with him. The writing is tight, the dialogue snappy, and the story held my interest all the way through (at least from the point where Fyfe joined the plot. And yes I know the book needed those eight chapters to bring the story along, but I would have structured it differently).

I do plan to read book three in the series (I purchased the Complete DCI Fyfe Mysteries Books 1- 5) and then decide about continuing after that. I’m having trouble reconciling my fondness for flawed characters with Fyfe’s getting so much enjoyment out of his bad acts. But there’s just something bout him that makes me want to know more.
800 reviews1 follower
May 20, 2024
Quick fun read. Getting used to this authors style and his characters in this 2nd book. David Fyfe has the means to retire but is hanging on to his resignation letter for now. He's called upon to be out of Edinburgh to oversee a colleague dealing with a murder. On arrival, he is informed that the case is solved after a prompt confession. When he hears the name of the confessor, it seems the case is not so open and shut.
Profile Image for Susan.
7,305 reviews69 followers
August 16, 2021
DCI Fyfe, always looking for the quiet life is happy to leave Edinburgh to head north to Loch Maree to oversee a possible murder/suicide investigation run by DI Moya McBain. Unfortunately it is not as straightforward as he hopes.
An entertaining crime story
Profile Image for David Stimpson.
1,000 reviews18 followers
December 21, 2023
2nd Book and really not convinced. Simple story that seems to like the characters thinking about each other than getting on with solving the crime .I will Finnish My interest in this series now
Displaying 1 - 7 of 7 reviews

Can't find what you're looking for?

Get help and learn more about the design.