<p>From the reviews of The Last Darkness:</p> <p>‘Riveting … The Last Darkness is so atmospheric you really do lose your sense of time and place as you delve deeper into Perlman’s world. The dialogue and tension are superbly crafted, and Perlman is a believable, well-rounded character. A terrific read.’<br />Publishing News</p> <p>‘Campbell Armstrong’s Perlman feels like a three-dimensional human being, sore feet and all … There’s a Columbo-meets-Rebus feel about him.’<br />Glasgow Sunday Herald</p> <p>‘Atmospheric and gripping, this tale of deceit, corruption and greed is hard to put down as Armstrong returns with the shabbily charismatic and irrepressible Perlman.’<br />Aberdeen Evening Express</p> <p>‘What a find this is. A tough, uncompromising look at society’s underbelly.’<br />Liverpool Echo</p> <p>‘How many other novelists are there out there whose work would be as enjoyable as this?’<br />Crime Time</p>

Detective Lou Perlman returns to Glasgow’s dark underbelly in the atmospheric new crime thriller from the acclaimed author of The Bad Fire and The Last Darkness. When a young Asian entrepreneur dies in a suspicious fall from his high-rise apartment and an Indian kindergarten teacher is gunned down in front of her class it’s clear to Detective Sergeant Lou Perlman that he is dealing with racially motivated murder. The emergence of a group called White Rage and a growing sense of fear across the city of Glasgow mean that Perlman needs some answers quickly. At the same time, he needs to make sense of a crime that is closer to home – the mysterious shooting of his own brother Colin. Lou’s conviction that the killing is connected to the underworld boss Leo Kilroy nags at his mind almost as much as his unspoken love for Colin’s widow Miriam. And when Lou Perlman looks beneath the glittering new surface of the city in which he was born, he finds all sorts of ancient connections, some of them painful, some of them shocking, many of them disturbing.
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Detective Lou Perlman returns to Glasgow’s dark underbelly in the atmospheric new crime thriller from the acclaimed author of The Bad Fire and The Last Darkness.
From the reviews of The Last Darkness: ‘Riveting … The Last Darkness is so atmospheric you really do lose your sense of time and place as you delve deeper into Perlman’s world. The dialogue and tension are superbly crafted, and Perlman is a believable, well-rounded character. A terrific read.’Publishing News ‘Campbell Armstrong’s Perlman feels like a three-dimensional human being, sore feet and all … There’s a Columbo-meets-Rebus feel about him.’Glasgow Sunday Herald ‘Atmospheric and gripping, this tale of deceit, corruption and greed is hard to put down as Armstrong returns with the shabbily charismatic and irrepressible Perlman.’Aberdeen Evening Express ‘What a find this is. A tough, uncompromising look at society’s underbelly.’Liverpool Echo ‘How many other novelists are there out there whose work would be as enjoyable as this?’Crime Time
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• In this, the third Lou Perlman novel, Campbell Armstrong creates not only a stunning suspense narrative, but a sense of his native Glasgow at once vibrant and elegiac, with a set of characters that will live long in the memory • Features Lou Perlman, the charismatic detective who appeared in the highly acclaimed The Bad Fire and The Last Darkness • His new Perlman series is rapidly gaining an enthusiastic following and has put the author in the top bracket of PLR earners Competition: Ian Rankin
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780007149643
Publisert
2005-02-07
Utgiver
Vendor
HarperCollins
Vekt
271 gr
Høyde
178 mm
Bredde
111 mm
Dybde
30 mm
Aldersnivå
00, G, 01
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
512

Om bidragsyterne

Campbell Armstrong was born in Glasgow and educated at Sussex University. After living in the USA for twenty years, he now lives in Ireland. He has been in the front rank of modern thriller writers for many years, and his bestselling novels include the highly acclaimed JIG series. His recent heartbreaking memoir, All That Really Matters, was also a remarkable success, particularly in Scotland and Ireland, where it was a No 1 bestseller.

‘Armstrong is among the most intriguing of writers… near to unputdownable’ GQ

‘Armstrong creates electric tension.’ Daily Telegraph