Based
on real events, bestselling and award-winning crime writer Adrian
McKinty
returns with a story of murder set in the South Pacific against a backdrop of
the Boer War.
It is 1906 and Will Prior is in self-imposed exile on a remote
South Pacific island,
working a small, and failing, plantation. He should
never have told anyone about
his previous existence as a military foot policeman in the Boer War, but a man needs friends, even if they are as
stuffy and, well, German, as Hauptmann Kessler, the local government
representative.
So it is that Kessler approaches Will one hot afternoon, with a request for his help
with a problem on a neighbouring island, inhabited by a reclusive,
cultish group of European ‘cocovores’, who believe that sun worship and
eating only coconuts will
bring them eternal life. Unfortunately, one of
their number has died in suspicious circumstances, and Kessler has been
tasked with uncovering the real reason for his demise.
Accompanied by ‘lady traveller’, Bessie Pullen-Burry, who is
foisted on them by the archipelago's eccentric
owner, Will and Kessler travel
to the island of Kabakon to find out what is really going on…
PRAISE FOR THE SUN IS GOD
‘Based on an
improbable but true story, the novel offers a fascinating twist on the
traditional “locked room” mystery, as only the island's miserable few
inhabitants can be considered suspects in the alleged murder...
But it's the
investigation of the central mystery, with its undertones of Paradise Lost
that proves most
entertaining.’ – Irish
Times
|
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Adrian McKinty grew up in
Carrickfergus, Northern Ireland. In 2000 he relocated to Denver, Colorado
where
he taught high school English and began writing fiction. His debut Dead I Well May Be was shortlisted for
the
2004 Ian Fleming Steel Dagger Award. His first Sean Duffy novel The Cold Cold Ground won the 2013
Spinetingler Award and its sequel I
Hear The Sirens In The Street was shortlisted for the 2013 Ned Kelly
Award. Adrian now lives in Melbourne with his wife and two children.
|
IMPRINT:
Serpent’s Tail -
NZRRP: $35.00
|
Former leading New Zealand publisher and bookseller, and widely experienced judge of both the Commonwealth Writers Prize and the Montana New Zealand Book Awards, talks about what he is currently reading, what impresses him and what doesn't, along with chat about the international English language book scene, and links to sites of interest to booklovers.
No comments:
Post a Comment