Gift Wrapped
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- $11.99
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- $11.99
Publisher Description
DCI Hennessey and Sgt. Yellich return in "a cleverly plotted, absorbing yarn that crime-fiction readers will savor" from the author of The Altered Case (Booklist).
When four postcards are sent anonymously to the staff of an advice center, each with the word "murder" scribbled in a foreign language and the same precise map coordinates, the police are called. DCI Hennessey of the Vale of York police and his team of detectives visit the sinister location and make a chilling discovery: the body of a professional man who had been reported missing ten years earlier. Who sent the postcards, and why so long after the crime? As Hennessey and his team investigate—uncovering more past murders, a case of local authority corruption and two manipulative wives keen to gift-wrap their husbands as murderers in order to benefit financially from their estates—they find themselves drawn into a puzzling and dangerous investigation.
"An elegantly constructed plot and a sly ending . . . Fans of contemporary British police procedurals will be satisfied." —Publishers Weekly
"DCI George Hennessey must rely on his team of Webster, Pharoah, Ventnor and Yellich to show their characteristic persistence in tracking a killer whose crimes are as devious as they are far-flung . . . their professional skills are worth your time." —Kirkus Reviews
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
An elegantly constructed plot and a sly ending more than compensate for some stilted prose in Turnbull's entertaining 23rd mystery featuring Vale of York policemen Det. Chief Insp. George Hennessey and Sgt. Somerled Yellich (after 2012's The Altered Case). Julia Bartlem brings four postcards she's received on consecutive days to the police, each bearing the word murder in German, Italian, French, and Latin; the same eight numbers on each appear to be map coordinates. When Hennessey and Yellich search the location indicated by the coordinates, they find a skeleton that's soon identified as that of a man missing for 10 years, James Wenlock. Routine police work solves a murder if not Wenlock's, and also uncovers yet another missing person's case. Solving the question of who sent the postcards, and why, may be the key to identifying a pair of highly clever killers, but can the police prove their guilt? Fans of contemporary British police procedurals will be satisfied.