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Crimson Dragon

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Murder. Abduction. Two cities. Two cops…
Eighteen months ago. Chinatown, London. A police raid goes disastrously wrong. People die. Today, the police officers involved in the swoop are dead. Serial, Purple One Five, are all dead, except the serial commander – Sergeant Brian Gibson.

In Hong Kong, a woman’s body is discovered in a seedy downtown Wan Chai hotel. Detective Inspector of Police Mandy Lee must determine who she is and who killed her. Lee identifies the woman as Andrea Ventress-Gibson. Lee’s investigation leads her to the UK, but Andrea’s new husband, Sergeant Brian Gibson, is missing – whereabouts unknown.
Meanwhile, in the UK, Road Policing Officer PC Ed Roberts discovers a cyber-attack on a police database. But he’s ordered to chaperone D. I. Lee. As a team they soon find that their enquiries are linked.

Against orders, Roberts follows Lee to London’s Chinatown, where they come into direct con

418 pages, Paperback

First published June 28, 2022

About the author

Stephen G. Collier

7 books11 followers
Stephen’s been an avid reader all of his life, and it’s not all been crime fiction either. The written word though is a challenge, and he is always concerned when he sees how the English language is developing, but not in a good way,

Much of his early reading centered on Science; fact and fiction, and history. Later, his life in the police service saw a growing interest in true crime and crime fiction. He always thought that one day he would write a novel, but it was only after he retired from the police that he began writing seriously.

Over his lifetime, many books and many genres have influenced Stephen, from Gibbons,’ ‘Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire,’ to Carl Sagan’s, ‘Cosmos.’ And from a crime fiction point of view, a wealth of authors he may have read in the past, but can’t remember all of them. What he can say for him revolves it around such greats as Elmore Leonard, Agatha Christie, Arthur Conan-Doyle, and Georges Simenon.

Crime fiction is the largest and constantly growing genre in commercial fiction. Trying to fit new authors in among the current crop of great CF writers, like Child, Rankin, McDermid, and MacBride, is a tall order. When Stephen wrote his debut novel ‘Blind Murder’ he had no idea about the ‘craft’ of writing. But what he knew was that it needed to be different. Being different, though, does not always get you a publishing deal or an agent.

Modern-day detectives in fiction are larger-than-life characters. Sometimes dysfunctional. Most times, alcoholic or close to being one, with a failed or failing marriage. And when you think about it to a certain degree, the problems of one fictional detective can be a crystallising of the problems of many police officers, but not all at the same time and not just one!

Blind Murder is different because it uses a road policing officer, reluctantly getting himself involved in things he shouldn’t do with a detective. The consequences of which will affect the rest of his life, (I won’t say any more in case you haven’t read it). Jake Jordan’s problems continue in the second in the series, ‘Driving Dead,’ published in January 2019.

Stephen realises that the days in front of him are shorter than the ones behind him and may seem to be in a hurry to write as much as he can. But his MA slowed him down (hence having to wait so long for ‘Driving Dead’), and it has taught him that plot, character, structure, setting, and point of view, are as important as just getting the story on the page.

A TV script is now written for Blind Murder, hoping one of the TV companies will pick it up. Stephen also has ideas for a stage play, based on a true incident he attended as a cop. An audio version of both books is another idea for the future. The book he wrote for his MA, ‘Crimson Dragon’, is now published by Troubador Publishing, under the Matador imprint. You can get it via the publisher’s website (Matador) , Amazon or my website (stephen-collier.com)

During 2022, Stephen looked at expanding his creative portfolio by seeking to train as a videographer under the name Five2Eight Productions. He now has a YouTube channel of the same name which you can access from the main menu.

Stephen is currently working on two other books at the moment. The first one is a book written by a deceased family member. ‘Let The Grass Green’ was written by his aunt in the 1950’s – recently discovered in her belongings. So he thought that it would be good to reveal it in all its glory – LGGG is now available on Amazon.

Stephen is an author member of the Alliance of Independent Authors, the Society of Authors and the Crime Writers Association.


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