An Image to Die For (Sam Dean Thriller, Book 4)
By (Author) Mike Phillips
Book 4
HarperCollins Publishers
HarperCollins
15th May 2023
United Kingdom
General
Fiction
Crime and mystery: private investigator / amateur detectives
Crime and mystery: hard-boiled crime, noir fiction
Thriller / suspense fiction
823.914
Paperback
288
Width 129mm, Height 198mm, Spine 18mm
190g
Behind the scenes of television production journalist-turned-investigator, Sam Dean, discovers greed, ugliness and murder.
When a TV producer offers journalist Sam Dean the job of tracking down a suspect in the brutal murder of a young woman and her child, he's reluctant to get involved. But when a colleague is stabbed to death on set, its clear something bigger is going on.
And when threatening anonymous notes start arriving, Sam is forced to dig for the truth
Standing astride 1980s Londons sharp racial divides, An Image to Die For is a crime thriller perfect for fans of S.A. Cosby and Walter Mosley.
Praise for Mike Phillips
This is Mike Phillipss best novel, brutal and caring, totally authentic
The Times
Phillips delivers his seamy tale with an enviably warm spareness of effect
Sunday Times
An incisive study of immigrant experience wrapped up in a gripping thriller
Times Literary Supplement
The Best British thriller in years A novel that seems to have been written for a purpose; it deals with the black British community as something other than a problem or a political clich
Marie Claire
Could have come from the pen of the master, Raymond Chandler
Today
A thriller which maintains pace and provides excitements rooted in reality a winner
Guardian
Theres much here to suggest that Phillips could be one of our bravest, most incisive social commentators
Mail on Sunday
Phillips depictions of urban London share more with Harlem and Los Angeles than the English drawing rooms of P.D. James and Ruth Rendell
Financial Times
Phillips gives a mean streetwise documentary edge to his heros hunt for a witness
Sunday Express
Mr Phillips writes in a precise uncluttered style that suits the detective novels ritualistic form. But it is the sensibility of his hero a black man that lends freshness to the form itself
The New York Times Book Review
As a political thriller it has something to say about multi-cultural Britain that is both revealing and intelligent a good novel, deftly handled and deserving of praise
Time Out
Mike Phillips was born in Guyana, came to Britain as a child and grew up in London. A journalist, broadcaster and university lecturer before becoming a full time writer, his series of crime fiction novels began with Blood Rights (1989), adapted for BBC television, and his reputation as a historian was established with Windrush: The Irresistible Rise of Multi-Racial Britain (1998). Mike writes for the Guardian, and works as Cross Cultural curator at Tate Britain.