Synopses & Reviews
1874 Philadelphia. As the United States tries to recover from the War Between the States, the city of Philadelphia is undergoing changes of its own. Large expanses of green are being taken over by horse-drawn carriages and street cars and buildings are springing up virtually overnight. It's the kind of place where smart and savvy Civil War veteran Wilton McCleary can make a name as a city detective, protecting a great and growing town in the last years of the 19th century. That opportunity comes in The Killing Breed when a valuable dog held for ransom and the search for a missing child introduces McCleary to another side of the Quaker City: under the gaslights of Philadelphia, cruelty is cheap -- and the secrets of the past are best left undisturbed.
Synopsis
As the United States tries to recover from the War Between the States, the city of Philadelphia is undergoing changes of its own. But when Civil War veteran-turned-detective Wilton McCleary searches for a valuable dog and a missing child, he is introduced to another side of the Quaker City where cruelty is cheap and the secrets of the past are best left undisturbed.
About the Author
MARK GRAHAM is the great-great-great-grandson of a 19th century Philadelphia policeman. He lives and work in the Lehigh Valley, Pennsylvania. His first novel,
The Killing Breed, was published in 1998.