A Bad, Bad Place
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4.1 • 21 Ratings
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- $14.99
Publisher Description
A gritty and poignant debut about a young working-class girl in 1979 Glasgow who happens upon the body of a murdered woman—and must face an insular community desperate for answers, as well as herself.
Glasgow, 1979: If it hadn’t been for her wee stupid dog, Sid Vicious, twelve-year-old Janey Devine might never have stumbled upon the corpse of Samantha Watson. And then maybe she’d still be able to sleep at night. And maybe her nana wouldn’t be so worried all the time. And maybe Billy “The Ghost” Watson, a
notorious gangster, wouldn’t be on her tail—for it’s Billy’s daughter who was left for dead on those train tracks, and now Billy wants answers.
Fear and gossip have spread through the tight-knit community of Possilpark, and while Janey swears she can’t remember the details of that morning, the cops think she’s hiding something—and indeed, there’s something she knows that she’s not quite ready to tell anyone, not even her nana, who won’t rest until this whole thing is behind them.
Shot through with remarkable humor, Frances Crawford’s stunning debut is a coming-of-age whodunit, an intimate portrait of a working-class neighborhood that weaves Janey’s innocent candor and her nana’s hard-earned wisdom into a sweeping tale of grief and survival that marks the arrival of a major new voice in crime fiction.
APPLE BOOKS REVIEW
In this moving and atmospheric mystery debut, Frances Crawford tells a gripping story through the eyes of those most changed by it. In 1979 working-class Glasgow, 12-year-old Janey Devine is walking her dog when she stumbles upon the body of a murdered young woman. The discovery shatters her sense of safety and draws unwanted attention from the police, media, and a community desperate for answers. As Janey struggles to make sense of what she saw, her nana, Maggie, works quietly to protect her while reckoning with her own buried fears and regrets. Crawford artfully balances Janey’s innocent, searching voice with Maggie’s hard-earned wisdom, vividly capturing daily life in their close-knit North Glasgow neighborhood. We loved how Crawford focuses on the human cost of violence, exploring guilt, memory, and resilience alongside the central mystery. A Bad, Bad Place is a powerful crime novel that combines suspense with deep compassion.