Old debts and the new booming Ireland make a deadly mixture.
In the sixth of the Minogue series, the troubled son of an Irish-American tycoon is found bludgeoned to death in the trunk of a car at Dublin Airport. There’s more at stake here than bad publicity for Ireland’s vital tourist industry. The victim’s father is the highly influential Irish-American tycoon John Leyne.
A confusing account of the victim’s itinerary suggests he’s travelling with a woman, and staying in lodgings in remote towns and villages. That female companion may be Aoife Hartnett, an archaeologist from the National Museum - but she can’t be found. The trail peters out near the west coast.
A pattern to their travels emerges: the route takes in sites where Aoife Hartnett worked. Two of those sites have had thefts in the past five years. Is it a coincidence that one of John Leyne’s passions in recent years has been the collection of antiquities?
A body is found in a shallow grave near an historical excavation site. Travelling back to his ancestral homeland brought this man not the glory he hoped, but a brutal end.
'Magically, Brady’s writing makes it dense and multi-layered… A treasure of a crime novel.’
- Toronto Star
'Brady's sixth novel is his best. Melodic, densely plotted, taking us from the Stone Age to New Age, Brady has a great eye for detail. Save it to savour.’ - Globe and Mail (Canada)
In the sixth of the Minogue series, the troubled son of an Irish-American tycoon is found bludgeoned to death in the trunk of a car at Dublin Airport. There’s more at stake here than bad publicity for Ireland’s vital tourist industry. The victim’s father is the highly influential Irish-American tycoon John Leyne.
A confusing account of the victim’s itinerary suggests he’s travelling with a woman, and staying in lodgings in remote towns and villages. That female companion may be Aoife Hartnett, an archaeologist from the National Museum - but she can’t be found. The trail peters out near the west coast.
A pattern to their travels emerges: the route takes in sites where Aoife Hartnett worked. Two of those sites have had thefts in the past five years. Is it a coincidence that one of John Leyne’s passions in recent years has been the collection of antiquities?
A body is found in a shallow grave near an historical excavation site. Travelling back to his ancestral homeland brought this man not the glory he hoped, but a brutal end.
'Magically, Brady’s writing makes it dense and multi-layered… A treasure of a crime novel.’
- Toronto Star
'Brady's sixth novel is his best. Melodic, densely plotted, taking us from the Stone Age to New Age, Brady has a great eye for detail. Save it to savour.’ - Globe and Mail (Canada)