Adrian McKinty is the author of eighteen novels, including the acclaimed Detective Sean Duffy novels. Rain Dogs won the 2017 Edgar(R) Award for Best Paperback Original. Gun Street Girl was shortlisted for the Anthony, Ned Kelly, and Edgar(R) Awards. The Cold Cold Ground won the Spinetingler Award. I Hear the Sirens in the Street won the Barry Award and was shortlisted for the Ned Kelly Award. In the Morning I'll Be Gone won the Ned Kelly Award and was selected by the American Library Association as one of the top-10 crime fiction novels of 2014. McKinty is also the author of the standalone historical The Sun Is God. Born and raised in Carrickfergus, Northern Ireland, McKinty was called "the best of the new generation of Irish crime novelists" in the Glasgow Herald.
The Cold Cold Ground confirms McKinty as a writer of substance...A
crime novel, fast-paced, intricate, and genre to the core.--
"Guardian (London)"
The Cold Cold Ground is a razor-sharp thriller set against the
backdrop of a country in chaos, told with style, courage, and
dark-as-night wit. Adrian McKinty channels Dennis Lehane, David
Peace, and Joseph Wambaugh to create an utterly brilliant novel
with its own unique voice.-- "Stuart Neville, winner of the Los
Angeles Times Book Prize"
A fascinating look at everyday life in Northern Ireland during 'the
Troubles.' The protagonist is clever and funny, the interaction of
the police and various factions is eye-opening, and the mystery is
intriguing, with an unexpected twist at the end.-- "RT Book Reviews
(4 stars)"
A journey into a terrifying and almost dreamlike labyrinth of
violence and betrayal, The Cold Cold Ground certainly won't let the
reader go. It's the first novel of a trilogy that promises to be a
superb read.-- "Shots Crime & Thriller Ezine"
Adrian McKinty is fast gaining a reputation as the finest of the
new generation of Irish crime writers, and it's easy to see why on
the evidence of this novel, The Cold Cold Ground, the first in a
projected trilogy of police procedurals.-- "Herald (Glasgow)"
Adrian McKinty's The Cold Cold Ground has gotten onto my five best
of the year list as it is riveting, brilliant, and just about the
best book yet on Northern Ireland.-- "Ken Bruen, Shamus
Award-winning crime writer"
At turns violent and labyrinthine, McKinty's fine police procedural
is also the ultimate page-turner.-- "Library Journal (starred
review)"
Detective Sergeant Sean Duffy...could well become a cult
figure...McKinty creates a marvelous sense of time and place...A
ripping yarn.-- "Irish Independent (Dublin)"
If Raymond Chandler had grown up in Northern Ireland, The Cold Cold
Ground is what he would have written.-- "Times (London)"
Irish novelist McKinty returns to his roots with the first book of
the Troubles trilogy, set in his hometown during the time he grew
up. At the height of conflict between the Catholic IRA and
Protestant paramilitary factions in 1981, Sean Duffy, a Catholic
police sergeant in the Protestant town of Carrickfergus, near
Belfast, gets an unusual case. Two gay men have been murdered,
their right hands severed (the classic modus for killing an
informant) and switched between the two bodies. Duffy initially
suspects a serial killer, but when no more gay men are targeted, he
comes to believe that the second killing was done simply to cover
up the first, in which the head of the IRA's feared internal
security force was the victim. Even after the case is reassigned,
Duffy defies orders and keeps digging, coming up against corruption
and collusion. Everything in this novel hits all the right notes,
from its brilliant evocation of time and place to razor-sharp
dialogue to detailed police procedures. McKinty, author of the
Forsythe and Lighthouse Trilogies, has another expertly crafted
crime trilogy going here, and readers will want to see what he does
in the concluding two books.-- "Booklist (starred review)"
It's undoubtedly McKinty's finest novel: a visceral journey to the
heart of darkness that was 1980s Northern Ireland. Written with
intelligence, insight, and wit, McKinty exposes the cancer of
corruption at all levels of society at that time. Sean Duffy is a
compelling detective, the evocation of the period is breathtaking,
and the atmosphere authentically menacing. A brilliant piece of
work which does for the North what Peace's Red Riding Quartet did
for Yorkshire.-- "Brian McGilloway, New Blood Dagger nominee"
McKinty belongs to a crew of much praised Irish crime novelists
that includes John Connolly, Declan Burkem and Ken Bruen.--
"Sacramento (CA) Bee"
No question, The Cold Cold Ground is an exciting launch for what is
sure to be an anticipated crime series. Great detective stories are
built on three key elements--setting, story, and protagonist--and
this one deploys each one magnificently. The setting--Northern
Ireland in 1981, during the hunger strikes--is portrayed with
frightening detail. The clever story evolves slowly as plot points
are pinned to cultural biases that transcend The Troubles--for
example, homosexuality and unwed motherhood. Police detective Sean
Duffy wins us over chapter by chapter with his tenacity; his
swaggering, witty dialogue; and his record collection--he spins The
Velvet Underground when in need of a lift. The audiobook exceeds
all expectations because of narrator Gerard Doyle. His storytelling
is understated, and his dialect work is remarkable. This is the
ninth collaboration between author and narrator, and this team
totally rocks. Winner of AudioFile Earphones Award.--
"AudioFile"
The rage, dissent, and blind self-interest of 'the Troubles' are
the perfect backdrop for this brutal noir masterpiece.... For all
of its brutality, the book is subtle and nuanced.... Duffy [is] the
keen observer, the perfect protagonist. A righteous man who
unwillingly takes his pursuit of justice into the realm of moral
ambiguity.-- "Arizona Republic (Tucson, AZ)"
This series starter from McKinty introduces hard-boiled but likable
Detective Sergeant Sean Duffy, a Catholic who remains brashly,
winningly sardonic even under the pressure of 1981 Belfast's
overwhelmingly Protestant police force...The deft mix of noirish
melancholy with express-train pacing and blockbuster-ready action
enticingly sets the stage for Duffy's future adventures.--
"Publishers Weekly "
Tropes are tropes for good reason. The important crime fiction ones
are present and accounted for here--a serial killer who purposely
leaves clues, a cop who's on to him, procedural and forensic
nitty-gritty. Yet McKinty can startle with bouts of lyrical
scene-setting that could only come from the fingertips of someone
who grew up in the environment...Your reviewer was born the year
The Cold Cold Ground is set in, and such passages work better at
painting a picture than any episode of Reeling in the Years.--
"Irish Sunday Independent (Dublin)"
Written in a terse style, the novel is a literary thriller that is
as concerned with exploring the poisonously claustrophobic
demi-monde of Northern Ireland during the Troubles and the
self-sabotaging contradictions of its place and time as it is with
providing the genre's conventional thrills and spills. The result
is a masterpiece of Troubles crime fiction: had David Peace, Eoin
McNamee, and Brian Moore sat down to brew up the great Troubles
novel, they would have been very pleased indeed to have written The
Cold Cold Ground.-- "Irish Times (Dublin)"
In this time capsule of a mystery novel, McKinty, with great skill and authenticity, transports readers to the Northern Ireland of 1981, at the height of the "troubles," when Bobby Sands and other IRA hunger-strikers are inflaming an already violent and unstable Belfast. DS Sean Duffy is a maverick on several levels, including being a Catholic in the largely Protestant Royal Ulster Constabulary in the town of Carrick-fergus, near Belfast. Duffy is trying to solve the murders of two gay men, one of whom turns out to be the head of the IRA's internal security force. Gerard Doyle reads with an Irish accent that sounds impeccable, lending added authenticity to dialog and language. The Cold Cold Ground is reported to be the first book of a "Troubles" trilogy, so look for these great characters and this engrossing setting to continue through at least two more books. verdict Not to be missed. ["For fans of Stewart Neville's crime novels, a new and harrowing Irish trilogy is under way. At turns violent and labyrinthine, McKinty's fine police procedural is also the ultimate page-turner," read the review of the Seventh Street: Prometheus hc, LJ 11/1/12.-Ed.]-Kristen L. Smith, Loras Coll. Lib., Dubuque, IA (c) Copyright 2013. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
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