Standalone
A Dickie Cornish Mystery
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- USD 9.99
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- USD 9.99
Descripción editorial
“Top 25 Mystery Novels of 2022” —The Strand Magazine
“Chambers makes the smell and harrowing vibe of the mean streets of the nation’s capital come alive.” —Publishers Weekly
Dickie Cornish, Washington, DC street denizen turned unlicensed private investigator, is forced at gunpoint to track down the daughter of an ex-con, setting up a chain of events that unleashes a war within the corrupt police force, exposes shocking conduct in child services, and unearths a secret that threatens to tear the nation’s capital apart. The second book in the Dickie Cornish mystery series, STANDALONE is a must-read for fans of S. A. Cosby, George Pelecanos, and Joe Ide.
It’s been over year since that bleak Christmas when a rich man peeled homeless, drug-addled Dickie Cornish from a steam grate, cleaned him up, and convinced him to use his street connections to track down his missing property. Now, as the summer sun bakes those same mean streets, the air is thick with crime, contagion, corruption. Dickie struggles with sobriety, anti-psychotic meds, and counseling at the VA, but manages to make a meager living as a private investigator with his sidekick, “Stripe”—until an ex-con named Al-Mayadeen Thomas sticks a gun to Dickie’s forehead and kidnaps him to a grim flophouse—a motel filled with squatters more desperate than the poor souls in the shelters.
Thomas demands that Dickie find his daughter, missing for years from the motel in a notorious cold case. The other squatters plead for him to find their vanished children as well. Thomas takes his own life to seal Dickie’s help, Police Chief Linda Figgis hauls Dickie in, gives him a Faustian choice: she directs him to help her close the Thomas cold case, but only if he forgets about the other vanished and abused children. To his horror, Dickie finds himself in the middle of a war within the police, with either side closing in for the kill to keep the truth hidden.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Early in Chambers's strong sequel to 2020's Scavenger, unlicensed Washington, D.C., PI Dickie Cornish, a former drug addict who was once homeless, is approached on the street by ex-con Al-Mayadeen Thomas, who says he needs the detective's help. When Thomas pulls out a gun, Cornish agrees to go with him to an abandoned motel, where Thomas begs Cornish to find his missing six-year-old daughter, K'ymira, who he believes has fallen prey to a human monster who has taken other kids. Thomas says he'll do something to ensure Cornish remembers K'ymira, then kills himself with a bullet to the brain. Cornish returns to his tiny apartment, where he's stunned to find D.C. police chief Linda Figgis, who also wants him to locate K'ymira. Figgis notes that the girl's disappearance was the one unsolved cold case from her previous position as a police commander. Cornish's subsequent investigation opens up a very ugly can of worms with disturbing political implications. Chambers makes the smell and harrowing vibe of the mean streets of the nation's capital come alive. Readers searching for a grittier version of Joe Ide's Isaiah Quintabe will find him in Cornish.