Sixteen Horses
A BBC Two Between the Covers Book Club Pick
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- 4,99 €
Beschreibung des Verlags
'Irresistible' - Val McDermid, author of the Karen Pirie series
'Breathtaking' - Daily Mail
Forensic, dark and utterly gripping, Sixteen Horses is the debut literary thriller from an extraordinary talent, Greg Buchanan. For fans of Jane Harper’s The Dry.
Near the dying English seaside town of Ilmarsh, local police detective Alec Nichols discovers sixteen horses’ heads on a farm, each buried with a single eye facing the low winter sun. After forensic veterinarian Cooper Allen travels to the scene, the investigators soon uncover evidence of a chain of crimes in the community – disappearances, arson and mutilations – all culminating in the reveal of something deadly lurking in the ground itself.
In the dark days that follow, the town slips into panic and paranoia. Everything is not as it seems. Anyone could be a suspect. And as Cooper finds herself unable to leave town, Alec is stalked by an unseen threat. The two investigators race to uncover the truth behind these frightening and insidious mysteries – no matter the cost.
'Totally gripping' - Alex Michaelides, author of The Silent Patient and The Fury
'Read it, read it, read it' - B. P. Walter, author of The Dinner Guest
'Original' - Sophie Hannah, author of Haven't They Grown
Featured on BBC Two's Between The Covers
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Buchanan's debut, a dark, ambitious, and highly intelligent thriller, opens with an arresting image. In a farmer's field, Alec Nichols, a policeman in the English seaside town of Ilmarsh, views 16 submerged horse heads, "all apart, all with only the barest strand of skin on display, all with a single eye left exposed to the sun." Nichols and a forensic veterinarian, Cooper Allen, begin investigating the ritualistic tableau and end up probing the past and present of Ilmarsh, whose residents appear to be dying from environmental and economic disasters. In spare, poetic prose, the story unfolds mostly linearly—people disappearing, more ritualistic animal torture—with occasional flashbacks to illuminate the inner lives of characters and the history of the place itself. Decades of economic activity (fishing, oil, manufacturing, a once-thriving tourism industry) have been killing the town and poisoning the psyches of the locals: "Dying places produced desperate people. Desperate people were not, as a rule, careful or subtle in their actions." The story line can be serpentine, but its rewards are worth the effort. This complex, often gothic tale is definitely an eye-opener.