Monument Road
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- $8.99
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- $8.99
Publisher Description
“This gorgeously crafted, shudderingly dark novel blends the genres of psychological thriller and murder mystery”—from the Shamus Award-winning author (Naples Florida Weekly).
Introducing former death-row inmate turned private investigator Franky Dast in the first of an intriguing crime noir series.
Having spent eight years on death row for a crime he didn’t commit, Franky Dast now works as an investigator for the Justice Now Initiative, seeking to help others in the same situation. But when he learns that Bill Higby, the detective whose testimony helped convict him, is facing his own murder charge, Franky is torn. Should he help the man he hates more than any other, the man who remains convinced of Franky’s guilt to this day?
As Franky delves further, he comes to realize that in order to prove Higby’s innocence, he must also prove his own. Unless he finds out what happened that fateful night eight years before, the night 15-year-old Duane Bronson and his 13-year-old brother were murdered, Franky will always be under suspicion, and the real killer will remain free. What really happened that dark, wet night on Monument Road? And is Franky prepared for the shocking truth?
“Like your noir pitch-black? So does Wiley.”—Kirkus Reviews
“Engrossing . . . Readers will want to see more of the complex Dast, who’s both fragile and strong, cynical and naïve.”—Publishers Weekly
“Masterfully setting in motion his main character’s goals and the array of blocking forces, the author carefully orchestrates the larger and smaller revelations, the successes and failures along Franky’s path, into a thundering coda of suspense.”—Naples Florida Weekly
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
This engrossing series launch from Wiley (Black Hammock Island) set in Jacksonville, Fla., introduces Franky Dast, who was convicted and sentenced to death row at the age of 18 for the rape and murder of two adolescent boys. Eight years later, the verdict is overturned thanks to Dast's tireless petitioning and to the relationship he's established with the Justice Now Initiative, a shoestring operation that specializes in cases of wrongful imprisonment. The JNI offers him a job doing research and sets him up with a reintegration therapist. But being free from prison doesn't mean being free from the past. When the police detective who arrested and coerced a confession from him is accused of shooting the son of a prominent judge, Dast finds himself after the initial rush of schadenfreude passes believing that the cop might indeed be innocent. He delves deeper and begins to see a pattern that stretches back decades and involves other deaths. Readers will want to see more of the complex Dast, who's both fragile and strong, cynical and na ve.