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What Members Thought
Jay Stringer is one of those writers who you know is in full control of every word he writes as soon as you begin reading. I mean, just read that blurb again. Tight as a hangman's noose. Not a word more, not a word less.
Ways to Die in Glasgow is told from a predominantly multiple first person point of view, alternating at regular intervals. It is hard enough for a writer to pull off one convincing first person voice, let alone several. It is testament to Stringer's ability that he manages it wi ...more
Ways to Die in Glasgow is told from a predominantly multiple first person point of view, alternating at regular intervals. It is hard enough for a writer to pull off one convincing first person voice, let alone several. It is testament to Stringer's ability that he manages it wi ...more
'Now didn't seem like the right time to tell Mrs Hunter that the only principle I'd been holding out for was the one called the right price.'
Ways To Die In Glasgow is a terrific read.
Told from multiple points of view, we get to witness events in the lives of a disparate bunch of criminals at a time when they’re struggling to maintain their usual murky equilibrium.
Stepping into their world is Sam Ireland, a brilliant new Private Investigator who manages to fill the PI mould and also to break it. ...more
Nov 10, 2015
Brandon Nagel
marked it as to-read





