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Chargement... Down Into Darknesspar David Lawrence
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Inscrivez-vous à LibraryThing pour découvrir si vous aimerez ce livre Actuellement, il n'y a pas de discussions au sujet de ce livre. Gruesome but beguiling. As with his three previous novels set in a (hopefully) fictitious area of London near Holland Park, the proliferation of the most heinous crimes goes all but unchecked despite the heroic endeavours of Detective Sergeant Stella Mooney. She is by no means flawless herself, but she is an immensely sympathetic character, coping with the memories of her grim childhood on the sink estate she now helps to police and the reverberations of assorted personal tragedies. The crimes she encounters are hideous, and the author does nothing to lighten their horror, though their is nothing gratuitous about them. In this book, West London is being stalked by a vicious serial killer (again), who selects his victims, kills them in very public settings and then writes a demeaning messages on their bodies ('DIRTY GIRL', 'FILTHY COWARD' ). Stella and her colleagues in the Area Major Investigation Pool are lumbered with the onerous task of investigating the murders from scratch. As in the three previous novels we are given appalling insights into life on the Harefield Estate where brothels, stills, hidden casinos and illegal armouries abound. Such is the sense of evil pervading the estate that at one point Stella notices a large crowd forming in the centre and, based on her experiences growing up there, immediately knows that it can only mean a vicious dog-fight is being arranged. Nothing else could cut through the residents pervading apathy! I hope Lawrence writes a further instalment. The naked body of a young woman is found hanging from a tree on a London roadside. Scrawled across her back are the words "DIRTY GIRL." Detective Stella Mooney is faced with a murder as baffling as it is chilling. With no means to identify the victim and no apparent motive, the case is blocked, until a man is found on a bench by the river, his throat cut back to the vertebrae. And, as before, the killer has left a trademark comment: "FILTHY COWARD." Stella and her team can see there's a connection--but what? One victim is a young girl, maybe one of the hookers who work the Strip; the other, a researcher for a prominent and controversial member of Parliament. More evidence is needed. And soon enough it comes: another death; another message.... aucune critique | ajouter une critique
Appartient à la sérieDS Stella Mooney (4) Listes notables
The body of a young woman is found hanging from a tree with the words Dirty Girl scrawled across her back. Then a second body is found, this time of a man - with one arm covered with the words Filthy Coward. DS Stella Mooney knows that she has an ingenious and vengeful killer on her hands. Aucune description trouvée dans une bibliothèque |
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Google Books — Chargement... GenresClassification décimale de Melvil (CDD)823.92Literature English & Old English literatures English fiction Modern Period 2000-Classification de la Bibliothèque du CongrèsÉvaluationMoyenne:
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As with his three previous novels set in a (hopefully) fictitious area of London near Holland Park, the proliferation of the most heinous crimes goes all but unchecked despite the heroic endeavours of Detective Sergeant Stella Mooney. She is by no means flawless herself, but she is an immensely sympathetic character, coping with the memories of her grim childhood on the sink estate she now helps to police and the reverberations of assorted personal tragedies. The crimes she encounters are hideous, and the author does nothing to lighten their horror, though their is nothing gratuitous about them.
In this book, West London is being stalked by a vicious serial killer (again), who selects his victims, kills them in very public settings and then writes a demeaning messages on their bodies ('DIRTY GIRL', 'FILTHY COWARD' ). Stella and her colleagues in the Area Major Investigation Pool are lumbered with the onerous task of investigating the murders from scratch.
As in the three previous novels we are given appalling insights into life on the Harefield Estate where brothels, stills, hidden casinos and illegal armouries abound. Such is the sense of evil pervading the estate that at one point Stella notices a large crowd forming in the centre and, based on her experiences growing up there, immediately knows that it can only mean a vicious dog-fight is being arranged. Nothing else could cut through the residents pervading apathy!
I hope he writes a further instalment. ( )