Forgive Me Father
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- £2.99
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- £2.99
Publisher Description
Who could kill a man of God?
A fire breaks out in a chapel, and DCI Warren Jones is alarmed by what is discovered at the scene. Curled up in the ash and debris is a body – and it’s soon clear that the chapel doors were locked from the inside.
The disappearance of a local priest, Father Nolan, and a cryptic note left in his room, point to an unusually violent suicide. But when further evidence confuses the picture, Warren begins to suspect foul play – and murder. Clearly, someone wanted this seemingly innocent man to suffer.
And when a discovery on a quiet riverbank sends the investigation reeling, Warren knows he must act quickly to discover who is behind this spate of grisly deaths – before another man of God is found dead.
Don’t miss Paul Gitsham’s ingenious new DCI Warren Jones novel!
Readers LOVE Paul Gitsham:
‘Mr Gitsham is fast becoming one of my favourite authors’
‘I love this series and hope Gitsham writes another book soon’
‘Paul Gitsham never fails to produce a good story’
‘I love the characters that Paul Gitsham has created’
‘Will definitely read more from Paul Gitsham.’
The DCI Warren Jones series
1 The Last Straw
2 No Smoke Without Fire
Blood is Thicker than Water (Novella)
3 Silent as the Grave
A Case Gone Cold (Novella)
4 The Common Enemy
A Deadly Lesson (Novella)
5 Forgive Me Father
At First Glance (Novella)
6 A Price to Pay
7 Out of Sight
8 Time to Kill
9 Web of Lies
About the author
Paul Gitsham started his career as a biologist working in the UK and Canada. After stints as the world’s most over-qualified receptionist and a spell ensuring that international terrorists hadn’t opened a Child's Savings Account at a major UK bank (a job even duller than working reception) he retrained as a Science Teacher.
Customer Reviews
A celibate-ation
Awesome read and honestly something I couldn’t put down.
Too long
There are chapters that add nothing to the story and a contrived plot which becomes so tedious that many pages can be skimmed. Also unnecessary to refer back to previous books which only make sense if the books are read in order of publishing.