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A Cast of Falcons

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
The threat from above casts a dark shadow.

A man falls to his death from a cliff face in western Scotland. From a distance, another man watches. He approaches the body, tucks a book into the dead man’s pocket, and leaves.

When the Scottish police show visiting Detective Chief Inspector Domenic Jejeune the book, he recognizes it as a call for help. But he also knows that answering that call could destroy the life he and his girlfriend Lindy have built for themselves in the village of Saltmarsh, in north Norfolk.

Back in Saltmarsh, the brutal murder of a researcher involved in a local climate change project has everyone looking at the man’s controversial studies as a motive. But Sergeant Danny Maik, heading the investigation in Jejeune’s absence, believes a huge cash incentive being offered for the research may play a crucial role.

With their beleaguered Chief Superintendent blocking every attempt to interview the project’s uber-wealthy owners, Jejeune and Maik must work together to find their answers. But will the men’s partnership survive when the danger from above begins to cast its dark shadow?
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      April 25, 2016
      Burrows’s intriguing third Birder Murder Mystery series featuring Det. Chief Insp. and bird lover Domenic Jejeune (the first book, A Siege of Bitterns, won the Crime Writers of Canada 2015 Award for Best First Novel) opens as a man falls from a cliff in western Scotland, and another man watching with binoculars finds the body, tucks a bird guidebook in the corpse’s pocket, and leaves. When Scottish police show Domenic the book, he immediately recognizes it as a call for help from his older brother, Damian, a criminal fugitive. If he answers the call and doesn’t turn his brother in, he risks not only his career but going to prison himself. Aside from that dilemma, his own police division in Saltmarsh also has a murder case to solve after a former employee of a carbon-capture research project is found dead in the woods surrounding the facility. The property is owned by Emirati princes, whose prized gyrfalcons, some of nature’s most lethal hunters, also enter the story. Burrows skillfully makes birds and birding an integral part of the plot, just as he brings Jejeune’s personal drama into this suspenseful and well-constructed mystery. Agent: Bruce Westwood, Westwood Creative Artists.

    • Kirkus

      March 15, 2016
      A police detective with a tough case is distracted by moral ambiguities in his own life. Brilliant DCI Domenic Jejeune (A Siege of Bitterns, 2014) is that rara avis, a Canadian serving in the British police force. Just as the Saltmarsh cops are called in to investigate the brutal murder of environmental scientist Philip Wayland, Jejeune has to leave for the Scottish Highlands, where local police have found a bird guide with his name on it on the unidentified body of a man who fell from a coastal cliff. Jejeune recognizes the book as a message from his reckless older brother, Damian, who's in trouble with the law and wants his help. Both brothers are avid birders, and Damian made the trip to Great Britain with the dead man, who wanted his help illegally trapping wild gyrfalcons. Filled with trepidation, Jejeune takes Damian back to the Norfolk home he shares with his girlfriend, journalist Lindy Hey. In the meantime, his team, including his sergeant, Danny Maik, has been searching for clues in Wayland's murder. Wayland was working in carbon-capture research, first at the Old Dairy property financed by Emirati Crown Prince Ibrahim al-Haladin, then switching to the nearby university where his fiancee works, raising hackles among some key parties. The public footpath leading through the Old Dairy property where Wayland was found has been the scene of several protests over the project, which threatens to destroy much of the local coastline, and the protesters are likely suspects. His colleagues naturally wonder why Jejeune is so distracted, and when a young woman working with gyrfalcons on the prince's land is ostensibly killed by one of them, Jejeune keeps to himself his search for a connection between the man dead in Scotland and his own case. Burrows' bird-watching expertise lends authenticity to an excellent mystery whose conflicted protagonist faces hard decisions.

      COPYRIGHT(2016) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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