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The Devil's Claw

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
Fans of Ann Cleeves and Elly Griffiths will enjoy this atmospheric British mystery debut—“a perfect novel for a cold night in a dark winter” (Foreword Reviews).

The hunt for a serial killer on the Channel Island of Guernsey leads investigators down a trail of local myths and long-kept secrets rooted in the insular community’s dark past . . .
Finding a drowned woman’s body on the beach is the last thing journalist Jennifer Dorey’s fragile psyche needs. She left London for her island home of Guernsey, England, in the aftermath of a traumatic incident that shook her to her core. Now, as a local newspaper reporter, it’s Jennifer’s job to prove the woman’s death...but she uncovers something far bigger and more sinister than she ever could have imagined.
Jennifer enlists the help of DCI Michael Gilbert to investigate a pattern of similar deaths over the last fifty years. Though he’s looking forward to a comfortable—and imminent—retirement, Gilbert joins the journalist on a dark trail of island myths and folklore that leads to the door of a Nazi soldier’s illegitimate son. But as Jennifer gets closer to learning the killer’s identity—and his painstaking plans for mayhem—she falls ever deeper into his grasp.
Sinister deeds unravel in the darkness in The Devil’s Claw, Lara Dearman’s exhilarating debut novel.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      November 13, 2017
      The discovery of a young woman’s body on a Guernsey beach puts news reporter Jennifer Dorey, the heroine of Dearman’s dark debut and series launch, on a tortuous trail into the island’s murky past. Eighteen-year-old Amanda Guile appears to have drowned by accident, but a prologue reveals that she was murdered. Over the next few days, Jennifer learns that five other young women died of drowning in 1966, 1974, 1985, 1994, and 2002; like Amanda, they all had fair hair and blue eyes. Jennifer shares her findings with Det. Chief Insp. Michael Gilbert, who agrees a serial killer is at work and begins to interview the victims’ surviving relatives. The suspense rises as the narrative shifts between the points of view of frustrated, increasingly anxious Jennifer and steady, plodding Michael. Glimpses into the mind of the unknown killer heighten the tension. A native of Guernsey, Dearman makes good use of the British dependency’s unusual topography and history. Well-developed characters ensure that readers will want to see more of Jennifer and company. Agent: Kari Stuart, ICM.

    • Kirkus

      November 1, 2017
      A Guernsey-bred reporter who's retreated from the criminal cobwebs of London to her birthplace finds the Channel Islands just as deep in malfeasance and a lot deeper in denial. Everyone in the parish of Vale is sorry that health care student Amanda Guille is dead at 18, and everyone is certain that her drowning was accidental. Only Jennifer Dorey suspects otherwise, and that's only because of a fluke: Margaret Dorey, the mother whose recent widowing has combined with Jenny's handling of an expose that turned too hot to handle to bring her back to Vale, happens in conversation to recall the similar case of her friend Elizabeth Mahy, who drowned in a bathing pool way back in 1966. A little digging discloses a history of four other young women who've drowned in the 50 years since--and if that doesn't sound like very many, well, "it's a very small island." Jenny works on the story assiduously, carefully sourcing every new development and resolutely avoiding sensationalizing the events. But when she discovers an incontrovertible link among the six victims, Brian Ozanne, her editor at the Guernsey News, runs headlong from the story for reasons that can't be good. Luckily, Jenny has already found a more receptive colleague in a surprising place: the local police station, where DCI Michael Gilbert, who'd openly invited her participation from the beginning, takes her a great deal more seriously. It's a heroic stand considering that the revelation of half a century of unpunished murders will be laid on his department and perhaps put paid to his career. In the end, though, the top prize for valor goes to Jenny, who refuses to walk away from the case and confronts the killer in a last-ditch effort to save yet another victim. Dearman's debut is overwrought in its addiction to italicized flashbacks, highly competent in its use of serial-killer conventions, and appealingly heartfelt in its heroine's entirely believable dedication.

      COPYRIGHT(2017) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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