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The Lost and the Damned

On sale

11th November 2021

Price: £10.99

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Selected: Paperback / ISBN-13: 9780857059642

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“Slick, sick and not for the faint-hearted. It will make you cry out (for more)” – Mark Sanderson, The Times

Exhilarating . . . This is not conventional crime” Barry Forshaw, Independent

Introducing Olivier Norek: Former police officer, writer on Spiral and an award-winning, million-copy bestseller.

A corpse that wakes up during the autopsy.

A case of spontaneous human combustion.


There is little by the way of violent crime that Capitaine Victor Coste has not encountered in his fifteen years policing France’s most notorious suburb ­- but nothing like this.

As he struggles to find a link between the cases, he receives a pair of anonymous letters highlighting the fates of two women whose deaths were never explained – two more blurred faces among the ranks of the lost and the damned.

Why were their murders not investigated? Coste is not the only one asking that question. Someone out there believes justice is best served on a cold mortuary slab.

What readers are saying about The Lost and the Damned

You can see the similarities with the TV series Spiral, which can only be a major positive!

A hard hitting and gritty French crime read that makes an impact.

A great thriller, sardonic, humorous, dark.

I loved this book. Well written and had an authentic feel to it. A complete page turner.

Translated from the French by Nick Caistor

Reviews

Bruno Corty, Figaro.
Norek displays the mastery and assurance of an old hand.
Barnard Lehut, R.T.L.
The French crime-writing revelation of the year.
L'Express.
The suspense is sustained until the final page. A masterful crime novel.
Strong Words
Spiral obsessives will recognise the same gritty northern Paris suburb, Seine-Saint-Denis, with is no-go drug estates, as well as the wearily nonchalant detectives and city bigwigs shepherding their own crooked agendas.
Mark Sanderson, The Times Crime Book of the Month
The Lost and the Damned hits the ground running and never lets up . . . This impressive debut is slick, sick and not for the faint-hearted. The first 30 pages contain what must be one of the most shocking scenes ever committed to paper. It will make you cry out (for more).
Barry Forshaw, Financial Times.
This is not conventional crime. Reading this full-throttle piece is a both a troubling and an exhilarating experience.

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