The latest in the series featuring Dr Clare Burtonall and male escort Bonn. The death of one of the syndicate's street girls arouses Clare's suspicions and the disappearance of a young boy from a local children's home puts Martina on edge. Plus Clare's way of life is under threat - will Bonn provide her with the support she needs?
John Grant is an English crime writer, who writes under the pen name Jonathan Gash. He is the author of the Lovejoy series of novels. He wrote the novel The Incomer under the pen name Graham Gaunt.
Grant is a doctor by training and worked as a general practitioner and pathologist. He served in the British Army and attained the rank of Major in the Royal Army Medical Corps. He was head of bacteriology at the School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine for the University of London between 1971 and 1988.
Grant won the John Creasey Award in 1977 for his first Lovejoy novel, The Judas Pair. He is also the author of a series of medical thrillers featuring the character Dr. Clare Burtonall.
Grant lives outside Colchester in Essex, the setting for many of his novels. He has also been published in Postscripts.
I don't even know how to categoraise this book. First of all it was dreadful - very badly written, bad story and thinly drawn characters, with no real ending to speak of. It's essentially about a doctor, Clare, who is seeing a male escort, Bonn, and is obsessed with him. He has an unlikely past in the Church and, although oddly uncommunicative, seems to be the only person in the novel with any moral compass. The most annoying element of the writing was that the author kept throwing in odd made-up words and phrases in the style of A Clockwork Orange, as if the novel's inhabitants lived in a parallel society. I found it kept distrcting me from the narrative flow and was totally unecessary. There's a sub plot involving a young boy who has run away from an abusive existance in a home run by the Christian brothers. But basically don't bother with this one, it's not worth it your time.