Coming March 2023 - The Art Marvik Mysteries reissued by Joffe Books.
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After leaving the Marines, Art Marvik goes undercover
to work for the UK's Police National Intelligence Marine Squad solving
mysteries steeped in the past.
It is often difficult to find a new author and one whose novels you think you might enjoy but libraries are a great place for dipping your toe in the water, or rather for letting your fingers do the choosing and there is also a handy little book in UK libraries that can help with that. It's called Who Else Writes Like? Reviewers have compared the Inspector Andy Horton novels to American writers, Ed McBain and Joseph Wambaugh and their British counterparts John Harvey and Peter Robinson both of the latter mentioned in the directory Who Else Writes Like? My crime novels are also compared to those written by Colin Dexter, Ann Cleeves, Robert Barnard, Graham Hurley, Dorothy Simpson and Neil White. In addition, there is also a good website called Fantastic Fiction where it is suggested that if you like Peter James and Stephen Booth then you might also like the Inspector Andy Horton and the Art Marvik Mystery Thrillers. Where to buy Pauline Rowson's
When I created Detective Inspector Andy Horton in THE PORTSMOUTH MURDERS (formerly published as Tide of Death) I had little idea that he would go on to solve so many murder mysteries, or that he had such a complex childhood. In THE PORTSMOUTH MURDERS, I knew that Andy Horton had no knowledge of his father and, until the age of ten, had been raised by his mother, first in London and then in a council flat in a tower block in inner city Portsmouth until one day she failed to return home from working at the casino. Read more about DI Andy Horton and his mother's disappearance
Locations are always a great inspiration for me and trigger ideas for many of my crime novels particularly those in the series featuring my Harley-Davidson, sailing detective Inspector Andy Horton, whose patch is Portsmouth on the South Coast of England. For number seven in the Horton crime series, THE CHALE BAY MURDERS, I was inspired by the beautiful and rugged coastline on the east of the Isle of Wight, in particular the stretch from Ventnor to St Catherine’s lighthouse and the secluded bays, a good place to put a body! First though I decided to feature a body being found drifting in the Solent, between Portsmouth and the Isle of Wight, just close to one of the four forts built as coastal defences by Lord Palmerston in 1859 to repel a French invasion. The French never arrived, not then although they certainly do now and are welcomed on the ferries that sail into Portsmouth International Port. But I digress. I decided to add a couple of unusual elements to the discov
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