



Where The Dead Lay
a sensational, gripping and moody crime thriller that will have you hooked
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4.0 • 2 Ratings
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- £3.99
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- £3.99
Publisher Description
From the pen of Hollywood screenwriter David Levien comes this brutal, brooding and bloody crime thriller. Perfect for fans of Lee Child and Harlan Coben.
"Crime fiction at its finest" - CHRISTOPHER REICH
"David Levien has placed himself among the best writers in the field" - ROBERT CRAIS
"This is American thriller writing at its rocket-fuelled, roller coaster best" - DAILY MAIL
"Real, entertaining, and remarkably fresh" -- ***** Reader review
"Levien writes bad guys as well as anyone out there... they are all so well drawn and conflicted and three-dimensional..." -- ***** Reader review
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HOW FAR WILL ONE MAN GO TO AVENGE A FRIEND'S MURDER?
THE VICTIM was a fighter, but strength wasn't enough to save him from this gruesome end.
THE MISSING are two well-paid private investigators who have disappeared on a confidential job.
THE FAMILY is formidable, deadly and crazy, and will stop at nothing to make their mark.
THE INVESTIGATOR is Frank Behr, haunted by an unspeakable loss, avenging his friend's death, and close to becoming . . .
THE HUNTED . . . can Behr track down the killers before they find him? And will he survive?
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Indianapolis PI Frank Behr juggles two cases in Levien's disjointed follow-up to City of the Sun. When Behr's Brazilian jujitsu instructor is shot to death execution-style at the Brazilian's martial arts studio, he decides to investigate unofficially. A real job soon comes Behr's way when a high-powered PI firm asks him to track down two of their missing investigators, who disappeared in the middle of a case involving derelict properties being used for illegal gambling dens. In taking a close look at the gaming dens, Behr comes face to face with a family of thugs who have launched a turf war to secure a monopoly on neighborhood crime. Despite the book's hefty body count, Levien is more interested in exploring the nature of violence, contrasting the controlled beauty of jujitsu with the unpredictable dangers of gunfights. While readers will admire Behr's determination to solve his friend's murder, some may feel that case distracts too much from his formal assignment.