Book description
Guilt, sacrifice and redemption in a freezing Peak District winter in
this tense psychological thriller from the acclaimed author of Black
Dog: 'A dark star may be born!' Reginald Hill
It wasn't the easiest way to commit suicide. Marie Tennent seemed to
have just curled up in the freezing snow on Irontongue Hill and stayed
there until her body was frosted over like a supermarket chicken. And
hers isn't the only death the police have to contend with either - not
after the discovery of a baby in the wreckage of an old Airforce bomber,
and the body of a man dumped by a roadside.
As if three bodies on her hands isn't enough, snow and ice have left
half of 'E' Division out of action and Diane Fry is forced to partner DC
Gavin Murfin. She and Ben Cooper were never a match made in heaven, but
next to Murfin, working with Ben starts to look like a dream.
He's on a trail of his own, though - and one as cold as the Peak
District January. In an equally bitter winter in 1945 an RAF bomber
crashed on Irontongue Hill killing everyone except the pilot, who walked
away and disappeared. Now his grand-daughter, Alison Morrissey, is in
Derbyshire desperate to clear his name, and Ben can't help taking an interest.
But is a fifty-year-old mystery really the best use of police time? Or
does a vicious attack in the dark Edendale backstreets prove that the
trail's not quite as cold as he'd thought? Could the past be the only
clue to present violence as an icy winter looks set to get even
chillier? Praise for Stephen Booth:
'Stephen Booth creates a fine sense of place and atmosphere … the
unguessable solution to the crime comes as a real surprise' Susanna
Yager, Sunday Telegraph
'The complex relationship between [Cooper and Fry] is excellently
drawn, and is combined with an intriguing plot and a real sense of
place: Stephen Booth is an author to keep an eye on' T J Binyon, Evening Standard
'Stephen Booth makes high summer in Derbyshire as dark and terrifying
as midwinter' Val McDermid
'A leading light of British crime writing' Maxim Jakubowski, Guardian
' 'Best traditional crime novel of the year'
Independent, Books of the Year Stephen Booth is a journalist. Blood on
the Tongue is the third novel in his series set in the Peak District,
and follows on from the success of Dancing with the Virgins, and his
widely acclaimed debut Black Dog.