Author:Dennis Lehane
Tie-in to the major motion picture, released on 12th March 2010.
US Marshal Teddy Daniels has come to Shutter Island, home of Ashecliffe Hospital for the Criminally Insane, to find an escaped murderer named Rachel Solando.
As a killer hurricane bears down on the island, the investigation deepens and the questions mount. How has a barefoot woman escaped from a locked room? Who is leaving them clues in the form of cryptic codes? And what really goes on in Ward C?
The closer Teddy gets to the truth, the more elusive it becomes. And the more he begins to believe that he may never leave Shutter Island.Because someone is trying to drive him insane...
Chilling, thrilling and so clever you'll be chewing it over long after the final page
—— MirrorA psychological tour de force. Absolutely nothing is as it seems in this effortlessly complex thriller
—— The Times Literary SupplementLehane's new novel carries an ending so shocking... that it will go down as one of the most aesthetically right resolutions ever written... A tour de force
—— Publishers WeeklyAnother entertaining adventure
—— Sunday TelegraphBlack's book is the most personal one yet.
—— The Press and JournalA brilliant, sweeping and heartbreaking novel, Black truly deserves your attention.
—— International Thriller WritersAs washed-up private detectives go, Gus Dury is compelling - he's as hard as any criminal and twice as self-destructive.
—— Evening StandardTony Black has written two of the finest crime novels to come out of the UK in the past twenty years and I'm willing to bet that in twenty years, Paying for It and Gutted will be on the top ten list of any crime list. But now comes Loss ... Phew-oh ... It's like having yer ass kicked and yer heart shrived simultaneously. What a privilege to watch a master writer achieve everything you'd hoped for and then some.
—— Ken Bruen, author of London BoulevardThis is modern crime at its most brutal, its most affecting, its most honest and its most intelligent.
—— Russel D. McLean, Do Some DamageTony Black's third novel Loss is another bleak investigation for his poignant Edinburgh washed up journalist turned involuntary private investigator Gus Dury. Black writes about urban blight and the curse of alcohol like no other, but his down at heel tales are also full of everyday humour. Harrowing but indispensable.
—— Maxim JakubowskiTony Black is my favourite British crime writer and Gus Dury the genre's most interesting protagonist. Like his previous books, Loss has the power, style and street swagger that makes most of his contemporaries a little bland by comparison.
—— Irvine WelshMost of the fiction books about Edinburgh are geared for the tourist but this is actually geared for the punter ... It really evokes the place ... In Gus Dury you have a very Edinburgh character. If Trainspotting's Begbie's younger brother had gone to university and become a journalist he might have been something like Gus Dury.
—— Irvine WelshFrom every angle - character study, philosophical discussion or straightforward plot - it shines with crystalline intensity, and so far as one can tell, nothing is lost in the translation. Complex and supremely elegant, this is a book to relish
—— Joanna Hines , GuardianThis is a book and a half
—— Giles Broadbent , WharfNesbo effortlessly shows what can be done with the classic detective story, employing clever tricks to maintain almost unbearable suspense
—— Joan Smith , Sunday Times, Christmas round upConsolidated his reputation as a Scandinavian novelist ready to fill any Larsson-shaped holes. Nesbo, one ex-rock star who can write, fuses urgent storytelling with a keen engagement with social issues
—— Barry Forshaw , Independent, Christmas round upA superb, tasty, huge page-turner... Seriously scary but a superior thriller
—— Vince Cable , Evening Standard, Christmas round upMy big book discovery this time was The Snowman by Jo Nesbo - it's about a Norwegian detective who has to investigate a series of gruesome murders. What could be better for holiday entertainment
—— Bruno Tonioli , Mail on SundayTHE NEXT STIEG LARSSON
—— Independent[A] dark, chilling, page-turner
—— Deborah D. Rogers , Times Higher Education, *Summer Reads of 2021*'Civilised, funny, life-affirming and hugely enjoyable. I can't recall reading crime fiction quite like this before- honest, ironic, and cheerfully unselfconscious. I urge you to share my surprise and delight.'
—— Philip Oakes, Literary ReviewOne of the most brilliantly playful, witty and original writers we have.
—— Scotsman'At heart a comic novelist, who explores the relationship between comedy and crime... In Case Histories, these skills have found their literary home.'
—— Heather O’Donoghue, Times Literary Supplement'Sharp humour, together with a number of unexpected twists, make this a typically pacey and intelligent read.'
—— Daily MailNot just the best novel I have read this year...but the best mystery of the decade. There are actually four mysteries, nesting like Russian dolls, and when they begin to fit together, I defy any reader not to feel a combination of delight and amazement. Case Histories is the literary equivalent of a triple axel. I read it once for pleasure and then again just to see how it was done. This is the mind of book you shove in people's faces, saying 'You gotta read this!'
—— Stephen King, Entertainment Weekly