Author:Carlo Lucarelli,Oonagh Stransky,Daniel Philpott
Brought to you by Penguin.
A professional killer is at large in the cities of Italy. Code-named 'Pit Bull', he is a master of disguise and an expert with weapons. He modifies his guns and his bullets are untraceable. His skill with prosthetics, wigs and makeup means that no two victims witness the same terrifying final vision. This is a hunt for a man with no face. Only the picture of a pit bull terrier left behind at each murder can link the crimes. Day after day, Ispettore Negro works on her seemingly impossible case. But when a young man unwittingly encounters Pit Bull in an internet chat room, he provides Negro with the clue that could lead her to her target.'Ispettore Grazia Negro thankfully remains centre stage-and Lucarelli carries over many of the fascinations of his feted first book' Time Out
Full of the tensions and atmosphere Lucarelli is so adept at creating
—— The TimesIspettore Grazia Negro thankfully remains centre stage...and Lucarelli carries over many of the fascinations of his feted first book
—— Time OutBeautifully written, with baroque energy and style
—— Jessica Mann , Sunday TelegraphMoves at a cracking pace with plenty of atmosphere and sympathy
—— Daily TelegraphFleming finds an unencumbered, historically penetrating language in which the simplest expository sentences can bring prose, story and setting into a crisp and evocative alignment
—— Sam Thompson , GuardianThis is a tense, thrilling and at times darkly comic novel with a complex central character who... bursts off the page
—— Time OutAn extremely wintry and hard hitting adventure story...this is a historical evocation at times as powerful as the account of pre-1914 Berlin that the late great Sybille Bedford gave us in A Legacy..... readers will surely welcome its author to the ranks of our greatest storytellers
—— Literary ReviewVirile, ruthless, adventurous
—— Independent'...a convincing, accurate thriller...this book is worth reading if only for the passage where the hero, Skelly, glimpses Osama Bin Laden at a public hanging; the scene both convinces and frightens'
—— The EconomistPatterson boils a scene down to the single, telling detail, the element that defines a character or moves a plot along. It's what fires off the movie projector in the reader's mind.
—— MICHAEL CONNELLYPatterson knows where our deepest fears are buried... there's no stopping his imagination.
—— NEW YORK TIMES BOOK REVIEWPatterson is in a class by himself.
—— VANITY FAIR[Patterson's] books don't pussyfoot around when it comes to the villains. These are bad, bad people ... with a lot of intrigue in high places.
—— AL ROKER, The Today Show