Police at the Station and They Don't Look Friendly: A Detective Sean Duffy Novel
From New York Times bestselling and Edgar Award-winning author Adrian McKinty, this thrilling mystery featuring Detective Sean Duffy was a Boston Globe Best Book of the Year.
Belfast, 1988. A man is found dead, killed with a bolt from a crossbow in front of his house. This is no hunting accident. But uncovering who is responsible for the murder will take Detective Sean Duffy down his most dangerous road yet, a road that leads to a lonely clearing on a high bog where three masked gunmen will force Duffy to dig his own grave.
Hunted by forces unknown, threatened by Internal Affairs, and with his relationship on the rocks, Duffy will need all his wits to get out of this investigation in one piece.
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Become an affiliateAdrian McKinty was born and grew up in Belfast, Northern Ireland. He studied philosophy at Oxford University before moving to Australia and to New York. He is the author of more than a dozen crime novels, including the award-winning standalone thriller The Chain, which was a New York Times and #1 international bestseller. McKinty's books have been translated into over forty languages, and he has won the Edgar Award, the International Thriller Writers Award, the Ned Kelly Award (three times), the Anthony Award, the Barry Award, the Macavity Award, and the Theakston Old Peculier Crime Novel of the Year Award. His novel The Island was an instant New York Times bestseller and made their "Best Thrillers of 2022" list.
"Another absolute cracker of a book in a superior series."
-- "Ian Rankin, New York Times bestselling author""There is plenty of action and excitement as we get to observe the normally flying-by-the-seat-of-his-pants detective grappling intentionally with his future. Superb."
-- "Boston Globe""Another mordantly witty mystery novel from the reliably excellent Adrian McKinty."
-- "Irish Times""'Police at the Station and They Don't Look Friendly' is a line from a song by Tom Waits, and it perfectly sums up the paranoid atmosphere at Carrickfergus CID in the late 1980s... McKinty moves seamlessly between action and reflection, and his sardonic tone is a delight."
-- "Sunday Times (London)""Gerard Doyle has become the voice of the Duffy books...Listeners should not be surprised that his Irish and British accents are perfect but he is also excellent with the French. There are some pretty gruesome scenes here but the story is gripping and...new listeners will want to seek out the earlier audios."
-- "SoundCommentary""Narrator Gerard Doyle has provided the voice of Adrian McKinty's Sean Duffy since the first audiobook of the series. Returning for book six, he's more in tune with Duffy's complexity than ever before...McKinty's blend of dark drama with perfectly timed humor and intensely plotted action is performed by Doyle as though he's intimately familiar with Duffy's mind, heart, and body. Listeners comprehend the vastness of Duffy's emotion without a caricatured delivery. Doyle delivers another winning narration. Winner of the AudioFile Earphones Award."
-- "AudioFile""This is familiar territory for Doyle, and he knows exactly how to navigate the material. From the tense opening scene, he keeps the story moving at a steady pace, expertly building the suspense...Bolstered by excellent characterizations, Doyle's reading holds the listener transfixed."
-- "Publishers Weekly (audio review)""[This book] is perhaps the best Sean Duffy of the lot in the wit of its dialogue, its inwardness, its exciting story and--essentially--in having a complex and memorably flawed hero in Inspector Sean Duffy."
-- "Weekend Australian""McKinty has created a Chandleresque character who walks the mean streets of Belfast...Driving it all is McKinty's compelling literary style"
-- "Booklist (starred review)""McKinty's hero is irreverent, charming, and mordantly, laugh-out-loud funny, and his eclectic personal soundtrack and bitter, pragmatic politics make for vivid period detail."
-- "Kirkus Reviews (starred review)""Riveting sixth Sean Duffy novel pits the detective inspector against some of his toughest foes yet."
-- "Publishers Weekly"