Murder for Political Correctness
-
-
4.0 • 62 Ratings
-
Publisher Description
Not for the politically correct!
DCI Fenton must track down a serial killer and avert moral panic before The Queen is forced to utter the words 'death penalty' in her speech.
Three victims, all from minority groups, are found murdered in a London hotel, after attending an 'embracing diversity' conference. They are all employees of a training company who want to make the world a better place through whiteboards and jazz hands. Is there a serial killer on the loose? Or is the killer someone closer to home?
The murders receive widespread media attention, fuelled by a journalist who has a personal vendetta against Fenton and will do anything for fame. With a power crazed opposition leader and a government on the brink of collapse, the murders reignite the political debate on capital punishment. Just who are the Far Right Extremist Enigma, and why does a political leader want to murder a Reality TV star who can't stop eating cake?
Do you ever think the world is getting too politically correct? Do you find yourself laughing at something, only to be met with a judgemental furrowed brow? Then this dark comedy whodunit is for you.
Buy the first book in the DCI Fenton trilogy now.
Customer Reviews
Murder for Political Correctness
DCI Eric Fenton and his team answer the call to a local hotel where three people have been murdered. As the investigation begins certain facts come to light to increase the public fervor to find the murder. The three victims worked for the same company and together fill all the protected classes for employment. As the team interviews their coworkers, three of them stand out as strong suspects. Will they sort through the clues to discover the guilty before another murder takes place? Or will this be DCI Fenton’s second unsolved case?
The story intrigued me as clues pointed to the conclusion but the investigators seemed to overlook them. However, this was another novel that could benefit from a solid editor as word choice and word omission drew the reader out of the story to solve the mystery of the intended word.
Great book!
It had no reviews so I wasn’t sure how it would be and it’s really good!
Tedious
Very tedious reading, takes way too long to get to the murders and side stories just detract.