To die in June

Alan Parks

Book - 2024

"A woman enters a Glasgow police station to report her son missing, but no record can be found of the boy. When Detective Harry McCoy, seconded from the cop shop across town, discovers the family is part of the cultish Church of Christ's Suffering, he suspects there is more to Michael's disappearance than meets the eye. Meanwhile reports arrive of a string of poisonings of down-and-outs across the city. The dead are men who few barely notice, let alone care about - but, as McCoy is painfully aware, among this desperate community is his own father. Even as McCoy searches for the missing boy, he must conceal from his colleagues the real reason for his presence - to investigate corruption in the station. Some folk pray for justi...ce. Detective Harry McCoy hasn't got time to wait."--Publisher description.

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MYSTERY/Parks Alan
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1st Floor New Shelf MYSTERY/Parks Alan (NEW SHELF) Due Oct 20, 2024
Subjects
Genres
Detective and mystery fiction
Thrillers (Fiction)
Noir fiction
Published
New York, NY : Europa Editions 2024.
Language
English
Main Author
Alan Parks (author)
Physical Description
325 pages ; 24 cm
ISBN
9798889660361
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

As a native Glaswegian, policeman Harry McCoy knows everyone from down-and-outs to petty criminals and snouts to Glasgow's richest crime lords. But when McCoy's boss sends him to Possil station to investigate whether the head cop there is on the take, things begin to go wrong. Rather than focus on his assignment, Harry insists on investigating the deaths of derelicts who remind him of his abusive dad, then gets drawn into a scheme that pays him for looking the other way when crimes are committed. He also encounters a staunchly devout minister whose wife has killed herself and gets involved in a war between two of Glasgow's most notorious criminals. Unfortunately, it's all too easy for Harry to cross the line between honest and corrupt, and as he begins to see that the things he's done--which at the time felt "right and good"--are in truth tarnished, evil, and wrong, he's forced to confront the man he's become. A provocative, disturbing read that will lead readers to consider the nature of good and evil and whether there's a difference between doing what's right and doing what's good.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

On the mean streets of Glasgow, crime never takes a holiday. DI Harry McCoy's sixth compelling mystery begins with an emergency call to a squalid crime scene where Jamie MacLeod, who's unhoused, lies dead and missing a shoe. In short order, another similar corpse is discovered, nudging Harry to the grim assumption that Glasgow is harboring a serial killer targeting the down and out. Nor is this the only series of crimes that Harry and partner Douglas "Wattie" Watson must tackle in the six-week span from late May to early July 1975. He's assigned to a new station house in an undercover assignment to probe corruption there. His concern for a man named Jumbo, who's taken a job as the bodyguard to Paul Cooper, a crime boss' son who's also Harry's longtime friend, signals that he may be softening. It's complicated. Further complications arrive in the case of Judith West, who's frantic over the disappearance of her 9-year-old son, Michael. Strangely, it appears that no son exists; Judith's clergyman husband verifies their childlessness and confesses his worry over Judith's behavior. Harry's not so sure. After Judith dies by suicide, Harry uncharacteristically attends her funeral, where a gray feeling settles over him and remains. Parks' gritty, panoramic novel particularly rewards series fans by deepening the stories of several returning characters. At the end, weary Harry contemplates his future. Could this be his final case? Sharp and bracing Scottish noir, with a streak of dark nostalgia. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.