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King of Swords
King of Swords
Oct 6, 2024 6:37 PM

Author:Nick Stone

King of Swords

Miami, 1981. When Detective Max Mingus and his partner Joe are called to the scene of a death at Miami's Primate Park, it looks like another routine — if slightly bizarre — investigation. Until two things turn up: the victim's family, slaughtered; and a partly digested tarot card in the dead man's stomach. The King of Swords.

An increasingly bloody trail leads Max and Joe first to a sinister fortune-teller and her scheming pimp son, then to the infamous Solomon Boukman. Few have ever met the most feared criminal in Miami, but rumours abound of a forked tongue, voodoo ceremonies and friends in very high places.

Against a backdrop of black magic and police corruption, Max and Joe must distinguish the good guys from the bad - and track down some answers. What is the significance of the King of Swords? What makes those who have swallowed the card go on a killing spree just before they die? And can Max find out the truth about Solomon Boukman, before death's shadow reaches his own front door...?

Reviews

The late medieval world, teetering on the edge of discoveries and ideas that will hurl it into one more recognisably like ours...evoked with a force and wit that are breathtaking

—— Financial Times

A novel of sunning intelligence, linguistic richness, thematic complexity

—— Il Giorno

This novel belongs with Voltaire' philosophical tales-in the entertaining guise of an erudite fiction story, it is also a vibrant plea for freedom, moderation and wisdom

—— L'Express

A brilliant deconstruction of the traditional crime novel

—— Iain Rankin , Mail on Sunday

Whether you’re into Sherlock Holmes, Montaillou, Borges, the nouvelle critique, the Rule of St. Benedict, metaphysics, library design, or The Thing from the Crypt, you’ll love it. Who can that miss out?

—— Sunday Times

Warm-hearted, superbly crafted

—— Sudnay Express

Compulsively readable

—— Scotsman

Wexford is as solid and reliable as ever

—— Birmingham Post

As ever, Rendell writes both literately and perceptively about her characters and the world they live in

—— Spectator

Probably the greatest living crime writer in the world

—— Ian Rankin
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