It's the coldest winter in Hull for years.
When McAvoy is told by a concerned stranger that an elderly woman hasn't been seen for a few days he goes to check on her - only to find her in the bath encased in ice: the heating off; the windows open; the whole house frozen over.
It could be a macabre accident but McAvoy senses murder. Someone watched her die.
As he starts to uncover the victim's story and her connections to a lost fishing trawler his boss Trish is half a world away investigating a mysterious death in Iceland. Hull and Iceland have traditionally been united by fishing - in this case they are linked by a secret concealed for half a century and a series of brutal killings that have never been connected.
Until now - when the secrets of the dead have returned to prey on the living.
PRAISE FOR DAVID MARK
'Dark compelling crime writing of the highest order' Daily Mail
'Truly exhilarating and inventive. Mark is a wonderfully descriptive writer and an exciting young talent.' Peter James
'Aficionados of the grittiest most trenchant fare love Mark's copper Aector McAvoy who customarily moves in a darkly realised Hull.' Financial Times
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David Mark spent more than 15 years as a journalist including seven years as a crime reporter with The Yorkshire Post - walking the Hull streets that would later become the setting for the Detective Sergeant Aector McAvoy novels.
His writing is heavily influenced by the court cases he covered: the defeatist and jaded police officers; the competent and incompetent investigators; the inertia of the justice system and the sheer raw grief of those touched by savagery and tragedy.
He has written five novels in the McAvoy series: Dark Winter Original Skin Sorrow Bound Taking Pity and Dead Pretty. David has also written a McAvoy novella A Bad Death which is available as an ebook. He lives in Lincolnshire with his partner two children and an assortment of animals.
David Mark
David Mark
David Mark
David Mark
David Mark
David Mark
David Mark
David Mark
David Mark
David Mark
David Mark
David Mark
David Mark
David Mark
David Mark
David Mark
David Mark
David Mark
David Mark