August sees publication in USA and as an e book, latest in DI Andy Horton series, Shroud of Evil
I'm delighted to announce that the latest in the crime series featuring the Portsmouth based copper, the flawed and rugged DI Andy Horton Shroud of Evil is published by Severn House in hardcover in
the USA and is released as an ebook on 1 August. It was published in
the UK and Commonwealth on 30 April 2014.
Shroud of Evil, the eleventh in the DI Andy Horton series, has received glowing reviews in America ahead of its publication and has been snapped up by the Rights Center as being ideal material for a television series and film - who knows we might one day see Andy Horton on screen in both the USA and the UK
Publishers Weekly says, "A compelling protagonist and mounting suspense make the book hard to put down," while Booklist reviewer hails Shroud of Evil as "A swirling cyclone of action leading to a shocking conclusion that will leave readers eager for the next installment in this always-surprising series."
Shroud of Evil has been described on Amazon as a "A traditional whodunit with modern twists and realistic procedural content."
Buy Shroud of Evil
Shroud of Evil the eleventh in the DI Andy Horton Crime Series |
Shroud of Evil, the eleventh in the DI Andy Horton series, has received glowing reviews in America ahead of its publication and has been snapped up by the Rights Center as being ideal material for a television series and film - who knows we might one day see Andy Horton on screen in both the USA and the UK
Publishers Weekly says, "A compelling protagonist and mounting suspense make the book hard to put down," while Booklist reviewer hails Shroud of Evil as "A swirling cyclone of action leading to a shocking conclusion that will leave readers eager for the next installment in this always-surprising series."
Shroud of Evil has been described on Amazon as a "A traditional whodunit with modern twists and realistic procedural content."
The DI Andy Horton novels have been compared by reviewers with those in the "upper echelon of
American procedurals by Ed McBain and Joseph Wambaugh
and their British counterparts, including the work of Peter Robinson
and John Harvey."
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