Cold is the Grave
Author | Peter Robinson |
---|---|
Country | Canada |
Language | English |
Series | Inspector Alan Banks, #11 |
Genre | Crime novel |
Publisher | Macmillan |
Publication date | 2000 |
Media type | Print (Hardback), (Paperback) |
ISBN | 0-330-48216-5 |
OCLC | 48884116 |
Preceded by | In a Dry Season |
Followed by | Aftermath |
Cold Is The Grave is the eleventh novel by Anglo-Canadian detective fiction writer Peter Robinson in the multi award-winning Inspector Banks series of novels. The novel was first printed in 2000, but has been reprinted a number of times since. The novel won the 2001 Arthur Ellis Award for Best Crime Novel[1] and the French Grand Prix de Littérature Policière.
Plot
In recent years, the career of Detective Chief Inspector Alan Banks has been stalled-and, in fact, very nearly destroyed-by the petty animosities of his politically ambitious senior officer Chief Constable Riddle. But when nude pictures of Riddle’s runaway teenage daughter show up on a pornographic Web site, he turns to Banks for help. The trail leads Banks first to London’s Soho, an area of strip clubs and sex shops, then to the upmarket Little Venice, where Emily Riddle is living with a dangerous gangster with ties to world of rock music. At first she refuses to come home, but later Emily turns up at Banks’s hotel, bruised and frightened and asking for his help. Soon she is back with her family in Yorkshire, and Banks’s work appears to be done. Other concerns occupy Banks’s time. A major reorganization and expansion of Eastvale Regional Headquarters has brought Detective Sergeant Annie Cabbot back into his life, and she soon finds demons of her own to face. As they begin an investigation into the slaying of Charlie Courage, a low-level petty crook, a murder occurs at an Eastvale nightclub, filling the tabloids with headlines that scream of scandal, sex and high-level corruption. It is a cold and savage homicide that shakes Banks to his core, and it soon leads to shocking revelations that suggest it is somehow linked to the Charlie Courage affair. The grim discoveries of the unfolding investigation lead Banks in a direction he does not wish to go: the past and private world of his most powerful enemy, Chief Constable Riddle.
References
- ↑ "Arthur Ellis Award Winners 1984-2005". Crime Writers of Canada. Retrieved 17 February 2017.