Student Alistair Minton is missing, and his parents want Sam Dyke to find him. He does
and subsequently learns the reason Alistair disappeared. It's because his parents, Carol and Giles, have been hiding something from others - and from themselves - since Alistair was a child. As he delves deeper, Dyke uncovers two murders separated by fifteen years. And he learns they're connected by people who are blind to consequences and act as if meeting their ends always justify the means.
Racing to solve the case before his client stands in an important election, the question Dyke must face is how he can preserve his own integrity and still bring the murderer to justice.
Written in the tradition of Raymond Chandler and Ross Macdonald, The Lonely Grave examines how damaged families can extend the hurt and shame experienced by one generation into the next, with results that are damaging to all.
Keith Dixon is a two-time First-place winner, private eye/noir category, in Chanticleer Reviews CLUE Awards for crime writing.
Dixons somewhat surly, often cocksure crime fighter, Dyke, is a marvelous creation. His investigative skills rival that of any intellectual British parlor sleuth, while his tendency to get in the face of dangerous characters shows he is no stranger to backroom brawls. Throw in a few sarcastic zingers to add humor to some otherwise very tense momentsand you have the essence of Dixons anti-hero. Theres no word out of place in this practiced writers prose; he knows how to pressurize a plot to the point of near explosion, then reins it all in and sweeps up the loose ends. Highly recommended.
Extract from Chanticleer Review of The Innocent Dead.
Genre: Mystery
Racing to solve the case before his client stands in an important election, the question Dyke must face is how he can preserve his own integrity and still bring the murderer to justice.
Written in the tradition of Raymond Chandler and Ross Macdonald, The Lonely Grave examines how damaged families can extend the hurt and shame experienced by one generation into the next, with results that are damaging to all.
Keith Dixon is a two-time First-place winner, private eye/noir category, in Chanticleer Reviews CLUE Awards for crime writing.
Dixons somewhat surly, often cocksure crime fighter, Dyke, is a marvelous creation. His investigative skills rival that of any intellectual British parlor sleuth, while his tendency to get in the face of dangerous characters shows he is no stranger to backroom brawls. Throw in a few sarcastic zingers to add humor to some otherwise very tense momentsand you have the essence of Dixons anti-hero. Theres no word out of place in this practiced writers prose; he knows how to pressurize a plot to the point of near explosion, then reins it all in and sweeps up the loose ends. Highly recommended.
Extract from Chanticleer Review of The Innocent Dead.
Genre: Mystery
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