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Deadly Virtues

A Mystery

#1 in series

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
First in the British police procedural series: "[A] stunning, paranoia-doused psychological suspense novel guaranteed to keep readers glued to their seats." —Library Journal (starred review)
The town of Norbold, England is famous for its low crime rate, thanks to the zero-tolerance policy of Chief Superintendent John Fountain. And Norbold's newest police recruit, Hazel Best, is happy to help keep it that way. But numbers never tell the whole story, do they?
Jerome Cardy knew he was going to die. He also knew that it would be made to appear like an accident. He might not be able to prevent it, but Jerome was determined to make sure that someone knew what was going to happen—even if that someone was Ash, a deeply introverted man with a concussion lying with his dog in the cell next to him.
After Jerome is found beaten to death by a fellow inmate, Ash can't forget Jerome's last awkward words to him: "I had a dog once. Othello. That was its name. Othello." Certain they hold a hidden message, Ash is determined to find the truth. But it won't be easy—because no one believes his account of that night. And now Hazel Best must decide whether pursuing the truth is worth her career in this "captivating" crime thriller from "one of the genre's best" (Booklist).
"Hazel is a straight shooter, pragmatic but principled . . . But the most remarkable character here is Gabriel Ash, a recovering trauma victim and the baffled recipient of a coded message . . . Gabriel is the kind of character who takes satisfying shape before your eyes; and Hazel's is the kind of classic detective work that's always welcome in a mad, mad world." —The New York Times
"[Jo Bannister is] one of the unsung treasures of the mystery genre." —Chicago Tribune
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      Starred review from January 7, 2013
      Stubborn morality and acid-tinged whimsy drive this superior stand-alone from British author Bannister (Liars All and eight other Brodie Farrell mysteries). Recovering mental patient Gabriel Ash looks pathetic and vulnerable as he rambles through the town of Norbold while talking to his dog. One day, at the local police station, where he’s recovering from a beating, Gabriel receives a cryptic message from a man who’s then killed by a crazed prisoner. Gabriel forces himself back into contact with normal humanity because he feels he ought to do something about the crime. Rookie policewoman Hazel Best is also dissatisfied with the official explanation of the tragedy. And so the three—the traumatized beating victim, the idealistic young cop, and the dog—begin sniffing under the pristine surface of the virtually crime-free town. They have no idea how dangerous good intentions can be. Bannister’s plotting is neat and her characterization smooth, with just enough irony to keep people from seeming ostentatiously noble. Agent: Jane Gregory, Gregory & Company Authors’ Agents (U.K.).

    • Kirkus

      February 1, 2013
      After 10 years of enviably low criminal activity, things are about to heat up for the town of Norbold. Apart from his inability to do anything about local drug lord Mickey Argyle, Chief Supt. John Fountain, of the Meadowvale Police, has reduced crime statistics to the vanishing point and kept them there. But those days end abruptly when the police arrest law student Jerome Cardy for leaving the scene of a car accident and he's beaten to death by Barking Mad Barclay, a violent racist who's been arrested that same night. The crime might seem like the product of the victim's massive bad luck, but Constable Hazel Best, a probationary officer in her first posting, doesn't see it that way. Neither does Nye Jackson, the senior reporter for the Norbold News. They're struck by the accuracy with which Jerome evidently foresaw his own death and the intensity with which he insisted on passing on a cryptic message--"Othello"--shortly beforehand to Gabriel Ash, a harmless local character dubbed Rambles with Dogs who'd been placed in Jerome's cell for observation after he was savagely beaten by a bunch of bored teenagers. The fragile relationship that grows between Hazel and Gabriel may remind longtime fans of Bannister of her nine tales featuring private investigator Brodie Farrell and her damaged assistant Daniel Hood (Liars All, 2010, etc.). Once Hazel and Gabriel decide that the danger to Jerome came not from outside but from inside the Meadowvale Police Station, however, the stakes rise for Norbold. Even so, Bannister (Death in High Places, 2011, etc.) keeps the focus on her memorable, if not entirely original, characters rather than the town they share or the plot--its opening moves piquantly surprising, its later surprises more predictable--that brings them together.

      COPYRIGHT(2013) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Library Journal

      Starred review from March 1, 2013

      Hazel Best is a rookie cop in Norbold, England. Gabriel Ash is a grief-stricken man who may hold the key to a man's death, but who talks only to his assistance dog. The odds that they can solve a murder seem slim. But they do investigate a theory that the college student who died in a police cell was a homicide victim. The victim, Jerome, had confided in Gabriel just before his death--using code from Shakespeare--and, fortunately, Gabriel cared enough to follow up. After he goes to visit Jerome's parents, someone tries to kidnap him, and he's released only because a local reporter witnesses the grab. The reporter fares less well; he's the next murder victim. Hazel and Gabriel need protection--stat. VERDICT The versatile Bannister (Death in High Places) has crafted yet another stunning, paranoia-doused psychological suspense novel guaranteed to keep readers glued to their seats. A good pairing would be Jonathan Lewis's Into Darkness, which also features an assistance dog. [See Prepub Alert, 10/08/12.]

      Copyright 2013 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Booklist

      March 15, 2013
      Every village has its eccentrics. In Norbold, England, it's Gabriel Ash, known locally as Rambles with Dog. Usually speaking only to his therapist and his dog, Patience, Ash is, at best, an unreliable witness to a beating in a police holding cell. Law student Jerome Cardy's last words I had a dog once. Othello were spoken to Ash. The party line is that Cardy was in the wrong place at the wrong time, beaten to death by a violent cellmate. It's only new police recruit Hazel Best who believes Ash when he says that Cardy told him he was going to die in that police station. Against the advice of the revered chief superintendent, John Fountain, Best investigates and finds ties to Nobold's last-standing Mob boss and Fountain's nemesis, Mickey Argyle. Ash is a broken man whose body keeps shuffling along even though his heart and soul were crushed years ago. His heartbreaking backstory is cleverly teased out over the course of the novel. Bannister departs from her Brodie Farrell mysteries (Liars All, 2010) in this captivating stand-alone thriller.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2013, American Library Association.)

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