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Cinnamon Skin: Introduction by Lee Child
Cinnamon Skin: Introduction by Lee Child
Apr 20, 2025 11:14 AM

Author:John D MacDonald

Cinnamon Skin: Introduction by Lee Child

'MacDonald had a huge influence on me . . . Reacher is like a fully detached version of Travis McGee' LEE CHILD

Travis McGee isn’t your typical knight in shining armour. He only works when his cash runs out, and his rule is simple: He’ll help you find whatever was taken from you, as long as he can keep half.

In the Florida Keys, a houseboat explodes in a giant white flash, instantly killing those on board. The boat belonged to Travis McGee’s friend Meyer. But it’s not Meyer who’s dead – he’d lent it to his just-married niece, Norma, and her husband, hoping to give them the perfect honeymoon.

When a group of Colombian terrorists take responsibility for the brutal act, Meyer and McGee travel to Mexico to seek justice. And Meyer, normally content in McGee’s shadow, is determined to avenge the one family member he had left . . . or die trying.

First published in 1982, Cinnamon Skin features an introduction by Lee Child

JOHN D. MACDONALD: A GRAND MASTER CRIME WRITER

'The great entertainer of our age, and a mesmerizing storyteller' - Stephen King

'Travis McGee is my favourite fiction detective. He’s great because he has a philosophical side – he will fight a bunch of mobsters in a car park and then have a muse about life, the universe and everything' - Tony Parsons

'A dominant influence on writers crafting the continuing series character . . . I envy the generation of readers just discovering Travis McGee' - Sue Grafton

'The consummate pro, a master storyteller and witty observer . . . The Travis McGee novels are among the finest works of fiction ever penned by an American author and they retain a remarkable sense of freshness' - Jonathan Kellerman

'. . . my favorite novelist of all time' - Dean Koontz

'A master storyteller, a masterful suspense writer . . . John D. MacDonald is a shining example for all of us in the field' - Mary Higgins Clark

'What a joy that these timeless and treasured novels are available again' - Ed McBain

'There’s only one thing as good as reading a John D. MacDonald novel: reading it again . . . He is the all-time master of the American mystery novel' - John Saul

Reviews

One of the most successful ventriloquial acts in crime writing.

—— Financial Times

McNab's great asset is that the heart of his fiction is non-fiction: other thriller writers do their research, but he has actually been there

—— The Sunday Times

A wonderfully creepy novel, macabre and blackly comic with a deeply unsettling and original hero.

—— Rosamund Lupton

Very clever. A creepily alluring voice

—— Julia Crouch, author of Cuckoo and Tarnished

Phil Hogan is a brilliant writer.

—— Peter Bradshaw

A wonderfully sinister fable of property and obsession

—— The Observer

Brims with wry wit and taut tension ... [and] delivers one surprise after another.

—— The New York Times

One to watch: An eerie page-turner.

—— Cathy Rentzenbrink , Bookseller

In terms of subject or style… Phil Hogan resembles John Updike or Richard Yates, figures from that classical seam of American fiction so rich in detail, domesticity, and murderous compromise.

—— Sunday Herald

Brilliantly creepy

—— William Skidelsky, The Observer

This book is a truly terrifying, creepy, disturbingly real tour de force, showing how trusting we can be with modern services and suppliers, people who we let in our lives and houses. Read it and be afraid.

—— Parmenion Books

About an estate agent who keeps keys of the properties he sells - it's sure to creep us out ... a novel to watch out for

—— Woman and Home

Powerfully menacing… full of brilliant comic timing… Not since Tom Ripley or Count Fosco in The Woman in White have I been as fascinated and horrified simultaneously by a villain as I was by Mr Heming. At under 300 pages A Pleasure and a Calling packs a lot into its slim frame.

—— Crime Fiction Lover

The only book I've ever read through my fingers over my eyes… Clever stuff!

—— The Book Bag

You’ll definitely want to change your locks after reading this original and darkly funny novel that will send shivers down your spine.

—— Stylist

William Heming is cut from the same cloth as Barbara Covett in Zoë Heller’s Notes On A Scandal, another unreliable narrator with whom we really should not be siding, but who proves so engaging that we can’t help but go along for the ride... in this gripping, thrilling novel.

—— David Barrnett , Independent on Sunday

There is a delicious feeling of complicity in his misdemeanours: Heming gets inside your head as easily as he gets into his neighbours' houses... a superbly plotted and genuinely creepy novel. It deserves to be a bestseller.

—— Sunday Express

A creepy and unexpected tale that will remain with the reader long after the book is finished.

—— The Star

Compelling, unsettling and macabre social satire.

—— Exmouth Herald

A gripping psychological thriller that pegs out the creep-o-meter with its chilling, original plot ... Readers won’t soon forget this first-rate, white-knuckle suspense novel.

—— Publishers Weekly

Channeling the socially detached and unnerving personality of Nabokov’s Humbert Humbert, Phil Hogan creates a character that will inspire intrigue as well as ire ... This perfect­ly paced psychological suspense story is a roller-coaster ride through paranoia and manipulation.

—— Scott Maucione , BookPage

Our mystery and thriller preview is filled with unhinged killers, criminal masterminds, and relentless stalkers, but no one gives us the heebee jeebees like William Heming ... this tale will have you wanting to change your locks by the time you’ve turned the final page.

—— Bookish.com

It is in Hogan’s handling of Heming’s slowly pointed self-revelation through his own voice that the brilliance of the novel is achieved … Hogan manages to create a voice both unreliable, amoral and almost charming ... A Pleasure and a Calling is an enthralling psychological thriller ... William Heming, a man no one takes notice of, is a man readers will remember

—— BlogCritics

The word ‘creepy’ (attached to descriptive adverbs like ‘insanely’ and ‘diabolically’ or even ‘deliciously’) immediately comes to mind.

—— New York Times Book Review

The first-person portrayal of a truly cold-blooded protagonist is a hard thing to pull off, especially one whose outward appearance is so benign but Phil Hogan has created an antihero horrifically ruthless and disquieting.

—— Observer

Hogan's fourth novel visits some dark places, and its enigmatic narrator and Middle England setting are brilliantly realised. This is a compelling read that leaves a prickle on the neck and doubts in the mind.

—— Guardian

Strongly reminiscent of the disturbing thrillers of Patricia Highsmith, notably in the ways in which the truly malign can lurk beneath the most ordinary of people and circumstances.

—— The Good Book Guide

The first-person portrayal of a truly cold-blooded protagonist is a hard thing to pull off but Phil Hogan has created an antihero horrifically ruthless and disquieting.

—— Lucy Scholes , The Guardian

Raw and real start to a new series

—— Sarah Hilary , Red Online

What could be standard police procedural stands out for its excellent character work and the timely way it deals with hot-button political topics dominating the headlines

—— Herald

The plot is tight, the anger righteous but not worthy, and the action thrilling. Happily she has a new novel out next year

—— Metro

Gripping…Excellent book.

—— Dorothy Flaxman , Nudge

A fine, literary thriller; cold, at times almost nauseatingly disturbing

—— Alison Flood , Guardian

A fascinating, subtle, really original modern Gothic thriller

—— Rebecca Chance , Daily Record
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