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Dead Gone (DI Murphy and DS Rossi, Bk 1)
Dead Gone - DI Murphy and DS Rossi, Bk 1
Author: Luca Veste
The young girl you have found isn’t the first experiment I’ve carried out. She won’t be the last. — A tense, unpredictable crime debut that will not only have you gripped, but will chill you to the bone. Perfect for fans of Stuart MacBride and Mark Billingham. — A serial killer is stalking the streets of Liverpool, gruesomely mur...  more »
ISBN-13: 9780007525577
ISBN-10: 0007525575
Publication Date: 1/16/2014
Pages: 408
Rating:
  • Currently 4.7/5 Stars.
 3

4.7 stars, based on 3 ratings
Publisher: Harper Collings/Avon
Book Type: Paperback
Members Wishing: 0
Reviews: Member | Amazon | Write a Review

Top Member Book Reviews

Linda avatar reviewed Dead Gone (DI Murphy and DS Rossi, Bk 1) on + 770 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
A serial killer is on the loose .... not so much different from other serial killers we've all read. They're all on the loose until they are caught.

This one is different. He is taking young university students and in his words .. experimenting ... on them. He is using a template of previous psychological experiments that were recorded years earlier. He is just 'improving' the tests.

DI David Murphy and DS Laura Rossi are called upon to investigate. Murphy is still trying to come to terms with finding his parents both brutally murdered. Rossi is ..in our country .. a rookie who looks to Murphy as a mentor. When the bodies, horribly mutilated, start piling up, Rossi fears for her supervisor's sanity.

I love the interaction between the characters. I feel sympathy for Murphy, who wonders if his loss of family will ever allow him to act normally. Rossi is young, ambitious, willing to do those things that bother her most ... like watching an autopsy. DS Tony Brannon is like a small puppy, so anxiously wanting all the big dogs to play with him but instead, they ignore him as much as possible.

There are lots of secondary people roaming around the perimeter of the plot line ...which is necessary in a who-dun-it. But they added intrigue rather than become distracting.

It was the cover of the book and the author's interesting name that drew me in ... but it was the book itself that kept me reading.
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