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Close to home cara hunter
Close to home cara hunter





Thank you for such a great read I’m sad it had to end. Close to Home, (2018), Hardcover Paperback Kindle. Publication Order of DI Adam Fawley Books. I’m very picky with narration voices too and this was so well chosen and a match made in heaven not just thrown together. As an Amazon Associate I earn money from qualifying purchases. I’m definitely going to hunt out and read everything this author has done. This book had me wanting never to put it down and when I wasn’t reading I wish I was. Also as I said deep character stories even in within each side detective and main event. You have storie within story and one minute you think it’s part solved it’s just ripped out beneath you and it follows another path. Not this you have a puzzle with twists and turns as you go This is not a straight forward detective who done it and why. Some can overdo things, go on or some finish and you say where is the ending. This book has everything and is also just the right amount. Only a few in years do you come across such a great read. Oddly, no one can pinpoint when the girl was last seen. An avid detective/thriller reader I get through so many. The disappearance of eight-year-old Daisy Mason from a costume party at her home in Oxford, England, drives this insidious, slow-moving novelas horribly fascinating as a train wreckfrom the pseudonymous Hunter. (Feb.This book has been one of the best books I have read for ages. Agent: Anna Power, Johnson & Alcock (U.K.). Readers will eagerly await Fawley’s next outing. Hunter exposes human frailties such as social and governmental missteps and policemen’s personal mess-ups while celebrating the essential humanity of those sworn to serve and protect. The painstaking work of Fawley’s highly diverse team emerges in transcripts of interrogations, emails, witness interviews, BBC scripts, and other documents that enhance authenticity. The subsequent discovery of a body buried in Harper’s garden raises the ante. The unidentified mother and son are taken to a local hospital, where a psychiatrist thinks the mother, who screams when questioned, is suffering from PTSD. The police arrest the house’s Alzheimer’s-afflicted owner, retired professor William Harper, but he claims he knows nothing about them. Adam Fawley, the self-deprecating, ironic narrator of British author Hunter’s arresting, unnerving sequel to 2018’s Close to Home, leads the investigation into the case of a young woman and a toddler, presumably her son, found imprisoned in the cellar of an old Oxford mansion.







Close to home cara hunter