Book description
In Almagen, a small village in the Andalucian mountains, Staffe
nurses himself back from the brink of death. His idyllic new life in
Spain appeals and Staffe is becoming a part of the community. One day
his friend, Manolo, takes Staffe to visit Almeria and tells him about
a body that has been found buried in an old greenhouse by the
Mediterranean. Staffe becomes inexorably drawn to the case and
befriends a journalist, Raul, who presents the killing as a simple
case of drug-trafficking gone wrong, but it soon emerges that this
murder mirrors the methods of torture used during Spain's brutal civil
war. When Raul plunges to his death in a drunken car crash, Almagen's
own secret past slowly rises to the surface, bringing with it family
feuds and an expatriate ménage of a famous British artist, a Vietnam
war vet, and a beautiful German heiress. Between the sierra and the
sea, everyone seems to want to bury the past - except Staffe, who's
new life is threatened as he refuses to abandon his investigation.
Once unearthed, the past refuses to go away and the closer the unseen
enemy gets, the more Staffe's own past haunts him - torn and trapped
by two so different worlds, and closer than ever to the man who
murdered his parents.
Adam Creed was born in Salford and read PPE at Balliol College
Oxford. He abandoned a career in the City to study writing at
Sheffield Hallam University, following which he wrote in Andalucia
then returned to England to work with writers in prison. He is now
Head of Writing at Liverpool John Moores University and Project Leader
of Free to Write. Death in the Sun is the fourth novel in the D. I.
Staffe series, which also includes Suffer the Children, Willing Flesh
and Pain of Death.