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Monday, 30 August 2021

A. MICHAEL DAY - COLD CALL (2021)

 


Synopsis/blurb ...

COLD CALL by A. Michael Day, is a Psychological Crime Thriller set in London.

Tyrone Williams is struggling to adjust to civilian life after leaving the army. Plagued by recurring nightmares, living in a run down tower block, stuck in a trainwreck of a relationship, and working for a call centre. Things couldn't get any worse...

Not until Tyrone cold calls Mrs Nowak...

After his telephone conversation with Mrs Nowak, Tyrone decides to investigate her for his own personal vendetta, and soon finds himself drawn into London's criminal underbelly. A world of seedy pimps, brothels, and violence. The deeper Tyrone gets, the more he questions whether he's the hero or the villain...

You Never Know Who Will Call...

An enjoyable book, but one which was let down a bit by the lack of a good edit. There are a lot of typos and grammatical errors and a few sentences which are a bit out of place, which kind of detract from an otherwise decent story.

A call centre, a zero hours contract job, a PTSD suffering veteran in a loveless relationship, a struggle to meet sales targets, pressures of life, economics, circumstances, an awkward customer and .... SNAP, something within our main character, Tyrone, a veteran breaks ... an obsession with tracking down the rude customer, a lost relationship, stalking, abusive phone calls, more information on the target, sympathy, a volte face, a desire to help, regrets, shame and very nearly two lives back on track.  

Interesting, enjoyable, a bit uncomfortable in places, a few twists and turns, before a decent ending. I liked the main character who is barely hanging onto his sanity and the little he has. It's also a commentary on modern society and the world of zero hours contracts and those barely getting by, only a missed pay cheque away from total wipeout and the loss of any footholds on the bottom rung of the ladder. 

I did question the helplessness Tyrone felt at times when confronted by indifference and apathy from his partner at home. He exhibits all the qualities of a door mat, which kind of contrasts too sharply with some of his behaviour later in the book. It's almost too radical a change to be plausible. He eventually gets his bags packed for him, but I think him giving his partner the heave-hoh would have made more sense, when I consider all that follows. Apart from this slight frustration with him, Tyrone fully had my sympathies, as did the object of his attentions, Mrs Novak aka Claire.

We also encounter domestic abuse, prostitution, sex workers and low level criminality. Not a side of London that you would ever really want to see. 

3 from 5

Read  - August, 2021

Published - 2021

Page count - 168

Source - Reedsy review site

Format - PDF read on laptop


2 comments:

  1. That's an interesting job context, Col - a call centre. They're everywhere, but I haven't seen a lot of stories of people who worked in them. I know what you mean about editing, too. I always get pulled out of the story when I run up against too many typos or grammar issues or things out of order, etc. Those are things that you don't pay a lot of attention to unless they're not done well.

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    Replies
    1. Margot, I think I've enjoyed some books previously with a call centre setting. It offers a lot of possibilities.

      I do expect to encounter the odd typo on a book, but there were just too many here.

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