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billing in Graham Hurley’s new book goes as usual to DI Joe Faraday
but the maverick DC Paul Winter plays an equally important role –
and an interesting contrast they make in personality and investigative
style. Cut to Black begins as coalition troops fight
their way through Iraq. Meanwhile, another war is being conducted in Portsmouth.
A special team has been formed in secret to try to bring down the city’s
major crime baron, Baz Mackenzie. While Faraday and his girlfriend, a
feisty documentary film maker vehemently opposed to the invasion of Iraq,
worry about what will happen after Saddam has fallen, drug dealers from
outside Portsmouth are already trying to stake out their territory in
what for decades has been Mackenzie’s kingdom. This book has everything
required of a first rate police procedural and Hurley is now firmly at
the top, with few rivals in this genre. Reviews "Big
time drug money is washing around Pompey. But it's dirty and needs laundering.
And how does one do that without being rumbled? Bazza Mackenzie, the main
man in town, has a plan. But so do the cops, and when Detective Inspector
Joe Faraday inherits the squad on the operation, everything goes pear-shaped.
But that's really no surprise as Faraday has other problems. His son,
J-J, is in a spot of bother with the drugs squad himself, and his, and
Faraday's on/off girlfriend Eadie's involvement in the anti-war movement
doesn't help one bit. It's certainly no way for a senior detective's nearest
and dearest to behave. Pompey's
biggest gangster has been getting away with it for years, at the start
of Cut to Black, latest in the increasingly admired Portsmouth
police series. Readers
who haven’t already found the brilliant Joe Faraday series of novels
by Graham Hurley should pick up the latest superb episode – Cut
to Black. Hurley is one of the best of the new crop of realistic
cop-shop writers, and British to boot. He’s a very different kind
of writer to Ian Rankin but he’s every bit as good. Cut
to Black is one of the best “police” novels I’ve
read in a long time and confirms Graham Hurley as one of the leading writers
in this type of crime fiction. His depth of knowledge of police operations
is remarkable – and his grasp of forensic techniques and pathology
cannot be faulted – a rare attribute these days. The plot is beautifully
constructed and the dialogue and writing are impeccable. Cut
to Black is about the seedy underbelly of a port with an enormous
history where poverty and crime walk hand in hand. Survival, despair and
greed motivate the characters. Graham Hurley writes with authority and
makes the reader intensely familiar with Portsmouth – its character,
its history, its architecture, and the substrata of its society. However,
his portrayal of the city itself as an important character doesn’t
detract from the action and the gripping twists and turns of his fiendishly
drafted plot. His flesh and blood characters are as finely drawn as the
urban landscape against which they do battle. He has an unusual capacity
to make one warm to his villains and sometimes doubt his heroes. He addresses
important issues within the format of a rivetting crime thriller; the
war against drugs, police corruption and personal moral compromise. Cut
to Black is an excellent read….a bleak but enthralling book. The
Joe Faraday series, better than most police procedurals, portrays the
multiple conflicts within the CID squad itself. Senior CID management
looks externally, responding to the demands of the wealthy, the real estate
developers, the press and – above all – the budget. Middlemen
cops with no money, no people and no time, struggle to do the actual police
work. Amidst a sea of overflowing paperwork, unsavoury deals are struck,
questionable priorities rise to the top, and short cuts are taken. The
stresses and conflicts of everyday life as a cop are keenly observed and
made frustratingly real in Hurley’s writing…. Called
the best procedural series since John Harvey’s Charlie Reznick novels,
Graham Hurley’s books featuring DI Joe Faraday have won praise from
both the crime writing community as well as from the police who have praised
the series for its careful research. Like most police characters, Faraday
has some baggage in his past but Hurley has been quite inventive here
as well. Add to this the fact that this tough cop has a fascination with
ornithology and you wind up with a great character up against some very
grittily real police drama. Hurley
has lived in Portsmouth for nearly 30 years and has done huge amounts
of in-depth research into real-life police procedures and cases. The result
is stunningly evocative and realistic crime novels dealing with highly
contemporary issues – and page-turning plots.
Graham Hurley returns with his fifth novel featuring DI Faraday, based in Portsmouth. This series has attracted phenomenal praise from critics and readers alike. Quote
from the autumn edition of Waterstone's Books Quarterly:
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