The City in Darkness
On sale
6th April 2017
Price: £9.99
CWA daggers: Endeavour Historical Dagger, 2017
				Christmas 1939. In Europe the Phoney War hides carnage to come. In Ireland Detective Inspector Stefan Gillespie keeps tabs on Irishmen joining the British Forces. It’s unpleasant work, but when an IRA raid on a military arsenal sends Garda Special Branch in search of guns and explosives, Stefan is soon convinced his boss, Superintendent Terry Gregory, is working for the IRA.
 
At home for Christmas, Stefan is abruptly called to Laragh, an isolated mountain town. A postman has disappeared, believed killed, and Laragh’s Guards are hiding something. Stefan is the nearest Special Branch detective, yet is he only there because Gregory wants him out of the way?
 
Laragh is close to the lake where Stefan’s wife Maeve drowned years earlier, and when events expose a connection between the missing postman and her death, Stefan realises it wasn’t an accident, but murder. And it will be a difficult, dangerous journey where Stefan has to finally confront the ghosts of the past not only in the mountains of Wicklow, but in Spain in the aftermath of its bloody Civil War, before he can return to Dublin to find the truth.
		At home for Christmas, Stefan is abruptly called to Laragh, an isolated mountain town. A postman has disappeared, believed killed, and Laragh’s Guards are hiding something. Stefan is the nearest Special Branch detective, yet is he only there because Gregory wants him out of the way?
Laragh is close to the lake where Stefan’s wife Maeve drowned years earlier, and when events expose a connection between the missing postman and her death, Stefan realises it wasn’t an accident, but murder. And it will be a difficult, dangerous journey where Stefan has to finally confront the ghosts of the past not only in the mountains of Wicklow, but in Spain in the aftermath of its bloody Civil War, before he can return to Dublin to find the truth.
Newsletter Signup
By clicking ‘Sign Up,’ I acknowledge that I have read and agree to Hachette Book Group’s Privacy Policy and Terms of Use
Reviews
			Part thriller and part historical novel, this is a blinder of a read!		
	
			Having already brought 1930s Dublin and Danzig vividly to life in his  outstanding debut The City of Shadows, Russell does the same for New  York in a sequel that's even better. The unique complexity of Ireland's  divided loyalties and enmities on the eve of the Second World War is  explored with unusual clarity and intelligence, and there are plenty of  thrills and spills too		
	
			A great insight into a turbulent time in Dublin and Ireland, in a challenging-to-your-heartbeat kind of way		
	
			In action ranging from Dublin to Danzig Russell has drawn on real-life Irish characters whose decent behaviour in the face of the impending Holocaust has been sadly lost over the years. This book has triumphantly revived their reputation		
	
			In action ranging from Dublin to Danzig Russell has drawn on real-life Irish characters whose decent behaviour in the face of the impending Holocaust has been sadly lost over the years. This book has triumphantly revived their reputation		
	
			A great insight into a turbulent time in Dublin and Ireland, in a challenging-to-your-heartbeat kind of way		
	
			A superb, atmospheric thriller...A page turner of high quality, populated  by a marvellous set of fictional characters, interwoven cleverly with  real characters of the era. Highly recommended		
	
			Complex but compelling ... utterly vivid and convincing ... Michael Russell's  style is a pleasure: easy, fluent, clear, always calm and never  over-heated. The result is an exciting comfort read, which sounds like a  paradox but isn't		
	
			Having already brought 1930s Dublin and Danzig vividly to life in his  outstanding debut The City of Shadows, Russell does the same for New  York in a sequel that's even better. The unique complexity of Ireland's  divided loyalties and enmities on the eve of the Second World War is  explored with unusual clarity and intelligence, and there are plenty of  thrills and spills too		
	
			Part thriller and part historical novel, this is a blinder of a read!		
	
			A superb, atmospheric thriller...A page turner of high quality, populated  by a marvellous set of fictional characters, interwoven cleverly with  real characters of the era. Highly recommended		
	
			Complex but compelling ... utterly vivid and convincing ... Michael Russell's  style is a pleasure: easy, fluent, clear, always calm and never  over-heated. The result is an exciting comfort read, which sounds like a  paradox but isn't