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The Death of an Irish Sea Wolf (Peter McGarr Mysteries (Paperback))

The Death of an Irish Sea Wolf (Peter McGarr Mysteries (Paperback))

List Price: $6.50
Your Price: $5.85
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 4 stars
Summary: More good work from B. M. Gill
Review: As usual, Gill does not let us down

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Deceptively mild beginning - Bang up conclusion
Review: Gill's 12th book could have opened with the hackneyed phrase "It was a dark and stormy night," but it didn't. Instead, Gill opened with a deceptively mild line: "Clement Ford heard the phone ring in the hall of the Clare Island cottage that he had occupied now for over fifty years."And the story begins. I just finished reading Bartholomew Gill's -The Death of an Irish Sea Wolf- which Ifound to be extremely involving. This book is the latest in the series on Peter McGarr and the Murder Squad. The book has everything, wealth, obsession, love, murder, and Irish history. It is a very well-crafted Irish Police Procedural, which got me involved from the very first page. If you haven't met up with Gill's, McGarr, I would suggest starting with the first book and continuing as the characters grow. I will admit I enjoy reading books in order, but each book stands alone.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Ireland through the mystery novel
Review: I plan to use this book with my high school juniors. To find a modern and interest-grabbing book which will whet their appetites for British Lit is a difficult task. I believe this book will do it with its fast-moving, physical plot encompassed in solid prose, idiomatic phrasing and cultural enticement. Though I am not usually a fan of the mystery genre, this one grabbed me.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Dartmouth v. Brown and Trinity
Review: Mark has outdone hisself- George probably agrees. Why so long and now two new coming in February- I am still waiting for a real TV series either Irish Television or BBC-Grandada-Ireland now has money and location, location, location/ Keep writing great works

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Great Book...please moreO
Review: One the best books i have ever read..A real page turner

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A bloody good adventure
Review: The Death of an Irish Sea Wolf is a far cry away from the English tea cozy brand of mystery. The question is not so much 'whodunnit?' as 'what will happen next?'. Exciting plot and good character development. I've already bought my next Peter McGarr Mystery.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: McWonderful!
Review: The way Gill incorporates such diversity of characters, history, and cultural anthropology is awe inspiring. I was help capture from start to finish. I have a student who was getting into his Irish heritage, so I lent it to him. Although not much of a reader, he loved this one. So much can be started with just the right book. Thank you Mr. Gill and Peter McGarr. ...Joyce Scholar is next.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Gill in top form
Review: This 1996 Peter McGarr mystery takes place primarily on the remote island of Clare where a man named Clement Ford washed up on the beach 50 years before and has lived ever since.

As the book opens, Ford is alerted to the arrival of a strange boat in the harbor. After so many years, his pursuers have caught up with him, in search of revenge and the treasure Ford absconded with at the end of World War II. By morning, several people are dead, Ford is missing and Chief Superintendent McGarr's fishing holiday is over.

With the help of his familiar Murder Squad team, his feisty, scholarly wife, Noreen, and the efficient mainland computers, McGarr begins to put together the pieces. Of less help are the closed-mouth islanders, many of whom despise "foreigners," whether they be mainland police or longtime benefactors like Ford, known to be behind the anonymous Clare Trust.

McGarr soon realizes that the killers did not achieve their objective - the treasure - and will return, losing themselves in the annual reunion of several thousand of the world's O'Malleys.

Gill is at his best here; his literary wit in top form, his characters gregarious and sharp, and the suspense heightened by harsh, windswept terrain and sudden, violent spring storms.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A Clever Tale of Greed, Betrayal, and Sacrifice
Review: This intelligently written mystery takes place off the coast of Ireland on Clare Island. The story centers on Clement Ford, a well-liked 80 year old Sea Man. Clem and his wife Breege live a modest lifestyle in their cottage on the island. They are personable and well respected by the remote communities citizens, however, they hold a deep dark secret.

One night after a violent storm, three people on the island turn up murdered and Clem and Breege mysteriously disappear. Detective Peter McGarr and his colleagues are assigned to the case. Police are baffled as to why anyone would commit these murders and how they could be tied to the quiet elderly Ford's.

Bartholomew Gill's story is unique in that you know who the killers are right from the beginning. However, the mystery lies in why did they kill? What do they want? Will they strike again?

The prose in this book is wonderfully descriptive. You will smell the salty air, see the rolling green hills, and watch the colorful Irish sunsets. The characters are refreshing and believable, and Gill provides the reader with accurate historical facts about the land and its people. This was my first Bartholomew Gill book, but it certainly won't be my last. What a terrific discovery!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A Clever Tale of Greed, Betrayal, and Sacrifice
Review: This intelligently written mystery takes place off the coast of Ireland on Clare Island. The story centers on Clement Ford, a well-liked 80 year old Sea Man. Clem and his wife Breege live a modest lifestyle in their cottage on the island. They are personable and well respected by the remote communities citizens, however, they hold a deep dark secret.

One night after a violent storm, three people on the island turn up murdered and Clem and Breege mysteriously disappear. Detective Peter McGarr and his colleagues are assigned to the case. Police are baffled as to why anyone would commit these murders and how they could be tied to the quiet elderly Ford's.

Bartholomew Gill's story is unique in that you know who the killers are right from the beginning. However, the mystery lies in why did they kill? What do they want? Will they strike again?

The prose in this book is wonderfully descriptive. You will smell the salty air, see the rolling green hills, and watch the colorful Irish sunsets. The characters are refreshing and believable, and Gill provides the reader with accurate historical facts about the land and its people. This was my first Bartholomew Gill book, but it certainly won't be my last. What a terrific discovery!


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