Death of an Irish Tinker
A Peter Mcgarr Mystery
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- 4,49 €
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- 4,49 €
Publisher Description
A body is found shackled to the upper branches of the tallest tree in Ireland. The victim is a "Tinker," one of the mysterious class of itinerant travelers who have roamed Ireland for generations. The murder bears all the signs of being the work of Desmond Bacon, "the Toddler," brutal king of Ireland's heroin trade. But who was the deceased and why was he killed? The answer lies with a Tinker woman named Biddy Nevins, who may be the only person able to put Bacon away--that is, if Peter McGarr and his crew can get to her before the Toddler does.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
In a powerful novel of revenge, Gill's focus shifts away from the series hero, Dublin copper Peter McGarr, and his dogged Garda officers (last seen in Death of an Irish Sea Wolf, 1996). Instead, the narrative centers on the hunted: a tinker woman named Biddy Nevins, gifted street artist, a mother and a former heroin addict. Biddy witnesses a man being thrown under a Dublin bus by two goons in police uniforms who then go after her. She lives on the run for years, changing her name and making money in the art world, but not before her man, also a "traveler" and musician, is murdered in a particularly grisly manner as a reminder of her enemy's long reach. Biddy's foe is the hunter: Desmond Bacon, alias "the Toddler," Dublin's biggest drug dealer. He was trained to kill in Vietnam, has an army of addicts working for him and informative friends in high places. McGarr, drawn in by the murder of Biddy's man, doesn't so much detect here as officiate while Biddy goes after her nemesis. Gill lines up new lovers for Biddy, a business manager and her now teenage daughter, all of whom serve as targets for the Toddler. The tinkers' world is explored with respect and sympathy; the two main characters are multidimensional, expertly rendered creations; even the very long time frame doesn't dull the suspense, although the bloodbath at the ending may leave some issues only murkily resolved. Readers may be surprised to find Peter McGarr so little involved in the action, but there will be no complaints. This is a riveting, page-turning tale.