Amazon.co.uk Review
Peter James is taking over the world -- or at least the crime fiction part of it. Dead Like You, the latest instalment in his increasingly popular series featuring Brighton detective Roy Grace, has sold even more spectacularly than its predecessors, keeping crime heavyweights James Patterson and John Grisham from the number one slot in the UK bestseller lists. And after lengthy delays, the long-awaited television series is to be made -- a series that will no doubt make Grace's stamping ground of Brighton as familiar as Inspector Morse's Oxford. So what is the secret of the James/Grace success? It's simple: over many years and many books, James has refined his storytelling skills to the nth degree and has the full measure of the classic police procedural narrative. In the new book, Brighton's Metropole Hotel is the scene of an unpleasant incident: a woman is savagely raped when she enters a room. Some days later, another woman is similarly assaulted -- both have their shoes stolen by the offender. Assigned to the case, Detective Superintendent Grace becomes aware that these two incidents have disturbing echoes of a sequence of crimes that shook Brighton in 1997. The rapist (who had been described as ‘Shoe Man’) claimed five victims, the last of which he had murdered before disappearing. Grace is faced with two unpleasant possibilities; that the original Shoe Man who cheated justice 10 years ago has returned to wreak havoc again, or -- equally disturbingly -- there is a copycat at work.
The growing army of admirers for James’ Grace books will be well aware of the mystery surrounding the disappearance of the detective’s wife, Sandy -- a disappearance that James has allowed to remain enigmatic. The narrative of Dead Like You plays on that intriguing plot strand, as Grace is obliged to travel back mentally to a time when he was happily married in order to discover how he can defeat a monster in the present. This is one of Peter James’s longest books, weighing in at nearly 600 pages, but aficionados will find that it is not a page too long. --Barry Forshaw
Review
'James is to be commended for producing an insider's view of a rape investigation, in this gripping novel about a desperately serious subject.' --Culture Magazine, Sunday Times
'If you have a taste for an intelligent well written tale of contemporary detection you could do no better... As usual, Peter James's work is brilliantly researched beautifully written and guaranteed to get your heart pumping.' --Sunday Express
'Peter James, with Dead Like You, and his detective Roy Grace artfully weaving through a complex yet utterly gripping plot, showed us why he deserved that No 1 bestseller slot.' --Daily Mirror --This text refers to the Paperback edition.
'If you have a taste for an intelligent well written tale of contemporary detection you could do no better... As usual, Peter James's work is brilliantly researched beautifully written and guaranteed to get your heart pumping.' --Sunday Express
'Peter James, with Dead Like You, and his detective Roy Grace artfully weaving through a complex yet utterly gripping plot, showed us why he deserved that No 1 bestseller slot.' --Daily Mirror --This text refers to the Paperback edition.
Product Description
The new Roy Grace novel from the bestselling author of Dead Tomorrow
Book Description
Dont imagine for one moment that Im not watching you. . . The Metropole Hotel, Brighton. After a heady New Years Eve ball, a woman is brutally raped as she returns to her room. A week later, another woman is attacked. Both victims shoes are taken by the offender . . . Detective Superintendent Roy Grace soon realises that these new cases bear remarkable similarities to an unsolved series of crimes in the city back in 1997. The perpetrator had been dubbed Shoe Man and was believed to have raped five women before murdering his sixth victim and vanishing. Could this be a copycat, or has Shoe Man resurfaced? When more women are assaulted, Grace becomes increasingly certain that they are dealing with the same man. And that by delving back into the past - a time in which we see Grace and his missing wife Sandy still apparently happy together - he may find the key to unlocking the current mystery. Soon Grace and his team will find themselves in a desperate race against the clock to identify and save the life of the new sixth victim . . .
About the Author
Peter James was educated at Charterhouse then at film school. His novels, many of which have been Sunday Times Top 10 bestsellers, have been translated into thirty languages and three have been filmed. He divides his time between his homes in Notting Hill in London and near Brighton in Sussex.