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The Death of an Irish Sea Wolf (Peter McGarr Mysteries (Paperback)) |
List Price: $6.50
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Reviews |
Rating:  Summary: A wonderful story full of Irish mysticism! Review: This is my third Gill novel and I can't wait to read the next one! As one reviewer said, The Death of an Irish Sea Wolf is so much more than a mystery story - it's poetry, history, adventure, and description- such marvelous description that I wish I could take off tomorrow for Ireland! Gill's characters are so alive that I feel after three McGarr stories that I know them personally!Any lover of the written word will love Gill's works!
Rating:  Summary: A great Irish escape to Clare Island, County Mayo. Review: Though some of his settings feel a bit reminiscent of Agatha Christie, Gill writes for a totally different audience--readers who do not shy away from realistically depicted (and sometimes gratuitous) violence, who do not expect the police to be models of probity, and who want their mysteries to be more than simple whodunits. In this 1996 combination of modern mystery and World War II thriller, set off the coast of County Mayo, Gill tells the tale of Clement Ford, a mystery man with a hoard of hidden treasure. Ford has just been tracked down by his old enemy, Angus Rehm, and the result is three deaths, three disappearances, two missing boats, and the arrival of Chief Inspector Peter McGarr from the Garda Siochana and his detectives, each of whom is also dealing with personal problems--alcohol, illicit affairs, and the demands of family--while trying to solve the mystery.
Local beliefs and superstitions, ancient history and pagan monuments, the geological record, and family history are interwoven with the more modern attitudes toward religion, the British, and authority in general, as Gill creates a lively "personality" for Clare Island. The mystery develops a global scope as Clement Ford's true identity and his World War II connections to Angus Rehm emerge in the final pages.
One of a long series of engaging Peter McGarr mysteries with a cast of well-developed repeating characters, Gill focuses on some intriguing aspect of Irish history and culture in each (e.g. eel-fishing, secret religious societies, literary history). The novels written prior to the recent Death of an Irish Sinner can be read in any order, but events in the latter are so explosive that it is difficult to go back if you read Irish Sinner too soon. The series is a fascinating look at Ireland and its characters--great fun and great escape reading. Mary Whipple
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