Synopsis/blurb….
Davie McCall is tired. Tired of
violence, tired of the Life. He's always managed to stay detached from the
brutal nature of his line of work, but recently he has caught himself enjoying
it. In the final instalment in the Davie McCall series old friends clash and
long buried secrets are unearthed as McCall investigates a brutal five-year-old
crime. Davie wants out, but the underbelly of Glasgow is all he has ever known.
Will what he learns about his old ally Big Rab McClymont be enough to get him
out of the Life? And could the mysterious woman who just moved in upstairs be
just what he needs?
Douglas Skelton’s 4th
Davie McCall book, but
only my first. After this enjoyable outing, plans are afoot to address that
situation.
McCall is a
loner – no family and only one friend. He’s an enforcer for Rab McClymont, but
he’s jaded, burnt out and wants out. Problem is he doesn’t have the kind of job
you can walk away from.
Rab senses
somethings up with his man. He needs watching. Davie’s under scrutiny anyway
from Donna, the interesting blonde who’s just moved in to the flat above his
own. Maybe he shouldn’t have got involved when her drunken ex turned up and
threatened her. And why’s McClymont fretting over the release from prison of
Jerry O’Neill?
Great
setting – Glasgow’s mean streets
An
interesting cast of characters – McCall himself;
McClymont
and his band of merry men, including the young scrote, Jimsie - sent to partner
Davie on the errands he’s no longer any appetite for, but which Rab keeps
sending him on.
A bent cop
Jimmy Knight (“How bent is he?” “The man can tie his shoelaces without
stooping.”)
A washed-up private
detective – Donovan, an unlikely ally for Davie.
Bottle
blonde Donna – who is she and what’s she after?
Dark and
satisfying, plenty of great dialogue and humour, that old cliché – a page-turner
– well it is. What’s even better is the economy of style in which Skelton wraps
this all up – a shade under 250 pages.
BIFF, BANG,
BOSH! Job done – highly recommended! I’m just a bit miffed I joined the party
at the end and not at the beginning. Oh well I can always read this one again
after the first three!
Douglas Skelton has his website here.
The first
three in the series are Blood City, Crow
Bait and Devil’s Knock. He has another
novel out soon The Dead Don’t Boogie –
something else I’ll have to check out.
Catch him on
Twitter - @DouglasSkelton1
Thanks to Juliette at Luath Press for the copy of this one.
Read in April, 2016 - April's pick of the month!
Sounds good!
ReplyDeleteIt is - I reckon you'd enjoy it!
DeleteSounds like it has all the stuff of a fine noir story, Col. Very glad you enjoyed it.
ReplyDeleteCharacters, action, pace, plot, setting - all ticks in the boxes.
Delete"Glasgow's mean streets" might pull me towards this book.
ReplyDeletePrashant, I think you would enjoy this trip to Scotland!
ReplyDeleteRight up your street, and now you're going to have to buy all the others? Your loft will need reinforcing...
ReplyDeleteDefinitely my kind of books! I got 2 and 3 on a kindle offer and the 1st I've borrowed from the library! No increased threat to the loft!
DeleteSounds like a possibility but of course I would start at the beginning ... someday.
ReplyDeleteI'm going back to the first and should be reading it soon, as I've got it on loan from my local library.
DeleteI really enjoyed this too! And like you started the series here.
ReplyDeleteI'm going back to the first three now, so may feel the need to re-read this once I've accomplished that mission! :-)
Delete