Winter Chill

By Jon Cleary

From the award-winning Jon Cleary, a novel featuring Sydney detective Scobie Malone. Concluding the acclaimed ‘Four Seasons’ tour of Sydney’s urban underside, the latest Scobie Malone investigation introduces death’s winter chill to the Detective Inspector’s own front door.

3.30a.m. The Sydney monorail performs its endless circuit like a pale metal caterpillar. All for the benefit of one dead passenger. Elsewhere in the city’s bleak midwinter, Darling Harbour buzzes to the sound of one thousand American lawyers attending an international conference. And that means one thousand opinions as to who killed their president.

Two bodies later, the Homicide Unit has lost one of its own. But establishing the connection is like trying to stick labels on a barrelful of eels. The more Detective Scobie Malone fillets the heart of the city’s legal profession, the more he cuts into an intrigue of international proportions…

Author: Jon Cleary
Format: ebook
Release Date: 17 Jul 2014
Pages: None
ISBN: 978-0-00-755496-6
Jon Cleary, who died in July 2010, was the author of over fifty novels, including The High Commissioner, which was the first in a popular detective fiction series featuring Sydney Police Inspector Scobie Malone. In 1996 he was awarded the Inaugural Ned Kelly Award for his lifetime contribution to crime fiction in Australia. His last novel, FOUR-CORNERED CIRLCE, was published in 2007.

PRAISE FOR JON CLEARY: -

'When the ruminants and the lucre-chasers are growing lichen on library shelves Jon Cleary will continue to be read'LOS ANGELES TIMES -

'Enough plot twists and conspiracy-making ingredients to satisfy the most demanding aficionado of the genre'IRISH TIMES -

”'The business of a novelist is to tell a story. Jon Cleary has that talent in abundance” - SUNDAY EXPRESS

”'The Malone stories come alive through their setting … Cleary’s writing is seamless and his plots imaginative and mature” - MIAMI HERALD

”'Cleary is a national literary institution… If Australia has a crime writer who deserves to be spoken of in the same breath as Ed McBain, Ruth Rendell, and P.D James, then it is Cleary” - SYDNEY MORNING HERALD