The Death of an Irish Tradition: A Peter McGarr Mystery
By (Author) Bartholomew Gill
17
HarperCollins Publishers Inc
Avon Books
21st August 2003
United States
General
Non Fiction
Crime and mystery fiction
Crime and mystery: police procedural
Thriller / suspense fiction
813.54
Paperback
368
Width 106mm, Height 171mm, Spine 23mm
181g
The Dublin Horse Show is one of the city's proudest traditions -- a grand institution tarnished this year by the murder of elderly Margaret Caughey. Chief Inspector Peter McGarr is puzzled by the strange death of a seemingly harmless old woman whose apartment contains not a trace of her past life -- and by the heinous crime's apparent links to the upcoming equestrian event. Nearly everyone associated with the unfortunate victim has connections to the Horse show as well, from dowdy Margaret's racetrack gadfly brother, to her surprisingly elegant daughter who's scheduled to compete . . . to an ex-IRA contract killer. And with race day rapidly approaching, McGarr knows he must work quickly to untangle this knotted skein of deadly secrets. For if he falters, the tireless detective fears that more blood may be spilt -- perhaps even his own -- before the riders leave the gate.
"Bartholomew Gill writes with literary grace. [His] dialogue sings with an Irish lilt." -- Washington Book World "His mysteries are so very good." -- Providence Sunday Journal "Gill never fails to deliver." -- Kansas City Star
Bartholomew Gill authored 15 Peter McGarr mysteries, among them The Death of an Irish Lover, The Death of an Irish Tinker, and the Edgar Award nominee The Death of a Joyce Scholar. A graduate of Trinity College, Dublin, Gill wrote as Mark McGarrity for the Star-Ledger. He died in 2002.