Bad Day in Minsk
By (Author) Jonathan Pinnock
Duckworth Books
Farrago
8th April 2021
United Kingdom
General
Fiction
Crime and mystery fiction
Crime and mystery: private investigator / amateur detectives
Humorous fiction
Popular and recreational mathematics
Mathematics
823.92
Paperback
320
Width 129mm, Height 198mm
Tom Winscombe is having a bad day. Trapped at the top of the tallest building in Minsk while a lethal battle between several mafia factions plays out beneath him, he contemplates the sequence of events that brought him here, starting with the botched raid on a secretive think tank and ending up in the middle of the Chernobyl exclusion zone.
More importantly, he wonders how he's going to get out of this alive when the one person who can help is currently not speaking to him.
Join Tom and a cast of disreputable and downright dangerous characters in this witty thriller set in a murky world of murder, mystery and complex equations.
Praise for Jonathan Pinnock:
Lovely stuff Ian Rankin
'A series of humorous, riotous mathematical mysteries' David Nicholls
He makes funny and self-deprecating company The Herald
Jonathan Pinnock writes compelling tales with a deliciously wicked glint in his eye Ian Skillicorn, National Short Story Week
Jonathan Pinnock is Roald Dahls natural successor Vanessa Gebbie
Funny, clever, and sometimes brilliantly daft. A comedy that I am sure would have made Pythagoras, Archimedes and Douglas Adams all laugh out loud Scott Pack on The Truth About Archie and Pye
Jonathan Pinnock is the author of the novel Mrs Darcy Versus the Aliens (Proxima, 2011), the short story collections Dot Dash (Salt, 2012) and Dip Flash (Cultured Llama, 2018), the bio-historico-musicological-memoir thing Take It Cool(Two Ravens Press, 2014) and the poetry collection Love and Loss and Other Important Stuff (Silhouette Press, 2017). He was born in Bedford and studied Mathematics at Clare College, Cambridge, before going on to pursue a moderately successful career in software development. He also has an MA in Creative Writing from Bath Spa University. He is married with two slightly grown-up children and now lives in Somerset, where he should have moved to a long time ago.