Synopses & Reviews
"Unbelievably assured and accomplished . . . MacBride is starting at the very top with his first book, which approaches the level of Michael Connelly's best work.... MacBride's writing is so good here that it's hard to believe it's not a sign of staying power."
---Flint Journal
"Tartan Noir has a fresh new voice with an Aberdeen brogue in Stuart MacBride, whose first mystery, Cold Granite, bids well to keep up with Ian Rankin and Denise Mina.... Cold Granite is never as dark and dangerous as the work of Mina and Rankin.... The police procedural gains a warmth and camaraderie that tougher and more cynical novels lack."
---Rocky Mountain News
"Logan---a troubled man but blessedly not a suicidal booze hound like other Scots coppers of recent and current memory---does his job with skill and humanity."
---Chicago Tribune
"Newcomer Stuart MacBride joins an illustrious roster of Scottish crime writers.... By tangling together a half-dozen competing plotlines, MacBride keeps readers off-balance, even those who think they can see the tripwires."
---Houston Chronicle
"MacBride introduces a very likable and human protagonist.... A suspenseful and compelling mystery, this is strongly recommended."
---Library Journal (starred review)
"MacBride's impressive first outing has plenty of atmosphere, subversive humor, and a sinuous plot reminiscent of fellow countryman Ian Rankin."
---Booklist (starred review)
"Cold Granite is a powerful reminder that the best contemporary crime fiction is coming out of Scotland. Ferocious and funny, this is Tartan Noir at its best."
---Val McDermid, author of The Torment of Others
"Atmospheric, dazzling, and completely compelling, Cold Granite marks the debut of an amazing new voice in crime fiction. Scotland's Stuart MacBride is one of the best writers to come out of the U.K. in a long time."
---Deborah Crombie, author of In a Dark House
Review
"Well-written...savage, darkly comic." --
Publishers Weekly
"Inventive and imaginative." --Dallas Morning News "Riveting."
--Booklist (Starred Review)
Review
"MacRae is an interesting and subtle detective, and his investigation is both inventive and imaginative."
---Dallas Morning News "Unbelievably assured and accomplished . . . MacBride is starting at the very top with his first book, which approaches the level of Michael Connelly's best work.... MacBride's writing is so good here that it's hard to believe it's not a sign of staying power."
---Flint Journal
"Tartan Noir has a fresh new voice with an Aberdeen brogue in Stuart MacBride, whose first mystery, Cold Granite, bids well to keep up with Ian Rankin and Denise Mina.... Cold Granite is never as dark and dangerous as the work of Mina and Rankin.... The police procedural gains a warmth and camaraderie that tougher and more cynical novels lack."
---Rocky Mountain News
"Logan---a troubled man but blessedly not a suicidal booze hound like other Scots coppers of recent and current memory---does his job with skill and humanity."
---Chicago Tribune
"Newcomer Stuart MacBride joins an illustrious roster of Scottish crime writers.... By tangling together a half-dozen competing plotlines, MacBride keeps readers off-balance, even those who think they can see the tripwires."
---Houston Chronicle
"MacBride introduces a very likable and human protagonist.... A suspenseful and compelling mystery, this is strongly recommended."
---Library Journal (starred review)
"MacBride's impressive first outing has plenty of atmosphere, subversive humor, and a sinuous plot reminiscent of fellow countryman Ian Rankin."
---Booklist (starred review)
"Cold Granite is a powerful reminder that the best contemporary crime fiction is coming out of Scotland. Ferocious and funny, this is Tartan Noir at its best."
---Val McDermid, author of The Torment of Others
"Atmospheric, dazzling, and completely compelling, Cold Granite marks the debut of an amazing new voice in crime fiction. Scotland's Stuart MacBride is one of the best writers to come out of the U.K. in a long time."
---Deborah Crombie, author of In a Dark House
Synopsis
Detective Sergeant Logan MacRae has been bumped to D.I. Roberta Steel's "Screw-up Squad" after a raid he led on a warehouse rumored to be full of stolen property ended with no arrests and one officer critically injured. The backstabbing, limelight-stealing, laziest D.I. on Aberdeen's police force, Steel's team is made up of the "no-hopers," the most worthless or inexperienced members of the homicide department, and Logan will do anything to prove he doesn't belong there. Including working overtime on two baffling cases: the murder by arson of six people, and the beating to death of a prostitute down by the docks, not a high priority compared to the fire. At least not until another prostitute ends up dead.
Although both cases seem simple on the surface---turns out the fire's victims are part of a drug dealer's inner circle, and what fate is to be expected for working girls in Aberdeen's red-light district? --- in Stuart MacBride's hands, what's going on in this rainy Scottish city is bound to be much more complicated than it appears. A detailed authenticity combines with a dark Scottish sense of humor and a lively cast of characters in MacBride's unputdownable second novel, confirming his status as a rising star of crime fiction.
Synopsis
MacBride's impressive debut "Cold Granite" took reviewers by storm, but this follow-up realizes all of its potential--and more.
Synopsis
With this follow-up to COLD GRANITE
, deemed an "impressive debut" by Publishers Weekly,
Stuart MacBride proves himself to be a rising star of crime fiction--and this time, the action is more explosive than ever...
A FALL FROM GRACE
On the coast of Scotland, in the "Granite City" of Aberdeen, Detective Sergeant Logan MacRae is stuck between a rock and a hard place. Bumped to the homicide department's "Screw-up Squad" after a sting operation gone wrong, Logan will do anything to prove that he doesn't belong there...even if it means working overtime on two baffling cases: a fatal act of arson in a squatter's apartment and the murder of a prostitute in the city's notorious red-light district.
A DEADLY UPRISING
But when it rains in Aberdeen, it pours--and soon Logan is up to his neck in danger. Turns out the two cases might have something dangerously in common. Now, enlisting the help of his former D.I., his forensic-pathologist ex-girlfriend, and his fellow "no-hopers" on the squad, Logan is charged not only with solving a series of vicious crimes but saving his own life--and reputation--in the process.
"Well-written...savage, darkly comic." --Publishers Weekly
"Inventive and imaginative." --Dallas Morning News
www.stuartmacbride.com
www.minotaurbooks.com
Synopsis
With this follow-up to Cold Granite
, deemed an “impressive debut” by Publishers Weekly
, Stuart MacBride proves himself to be a rising star of crime fiction—and in Dying Light
, the action is more explosive than ever…
A FALL FROM GRACE
On the coast of Scotland, in the “Granite City” of Aberdeen, Detective Sergeant Logan McRae is stuck between a rock and a hard place. Bumped to the homicide departments “Screw-up Squad” after a sting operation gone wrong, Logan will do anything to prove that he doesnt belong there…even if it means working overtime on two baffling cases: a fatal act of arson in a squatters apartment and the murder of a prostitute in the citys notorious red-light district.
A DEADLY UPRISING
But when it rains in Aberdeen, it pours—and soon Logan is up to his neck in danger. Turns out the two cases might have something dangerously in common. Now, enlisting the help of his former D.I., his forensic-pathologist ex-girlfriend, and his fellow “no-hopers” on the squad, Logan is charged not only with solving a series of vicious crimes but saving his own life—and reputation—in the process.
About the Author
Stuart MacBride was born in Dumbarton, Scotland, but moved with his family to Aberdeen when he was two, and he now lives in Aberdeen with his wife. This is his second novel, after Cold Granite, which was shortlisted for the International Thriller Writers Award for Best First Novel.