About this item
Highlights
- A page-turning journalistic thriller starring a rookie female reporter for the Boston Standard who's determined to chase down a big story . . . with potentially deadly consequences.Boston Standard journalist Emily - Em - Kelton is desperate for a big story.
- Author(s): Clea Simon
- 224 Pages
- Fiction + Literature Genres, Mystery & Detective
Description
Book Synopsis
A page-turning journalistic thriller starring a rookie female reporter for the Boston Standard who's determined to chase down a big story . . . with potentially deadly consequences.
Boston Standard journalist Emily - Em - Kelton is desperate for a big story. As a new reporter Em covers the police beat, which has her responding to every crime that comes across the newsroom scanner. Despite the drudgery and the largely nocturnal hours, it's a beat that suits her - especially with her affinity for the low-level criminals she regularly interacts with and what she considers a healthy scepticism for the rules.
Review Quotes
The plot is tightly written with several twists and turns to keep it interesting-- "Gumshoe Review"
Readers will quickly find that the twists and turns of the plot more than satisfy - with a particularly stellar final act that is guaranteed to please even the harshest critic of crime fiction-- "BOLO Books"
Fast-paced and deeply satisfying . . . Simon is at the height of her considerable powers . . .
The prose here is propulsive, stylish, and pleasingly spare, with narrating crime reporter Emily Kelton's voice sliding often into noir territory. Bad Boy Beat is a top-notch read, securing Simon's position as one of the sharpest voices working in crime fiction today
Cozy author Simon takes a turn to the dark side with this edgy first in a series . . . Noir fans who are fond of felines will find a lot to like-- "Publishers Weekly on The Ninth Life"
For Fans of Alexander McCall and Janet Evanovich-- "Library Journal on Hold Me Down"
If you want a swift mystery with plenty of
clues, you'll enjoy this-- "Kings River Life"
Simon draws on her career as a journalist, in particular her reporting on Boston's music scene in the 1990s, for the setting, concert scenes, and flashbacks, bringing a gritty reality to this dark suspense tale-- "Booklist on Hold Me Down"
Simon expertly casts suspicion on one member of her tiny human cast after another-- "Kirkus Reviews on An Incantation of Cats"
Simon, a former Bostonian who once wrote for magazines covering the music scene, kicks off her Boston Noir series with a fascinating reminiscence of sex, drugs, and rock and roll-- "Kirkus Reviews on World Enough"
Simon's staccato prose sets a tense mood that keeps readers on the edge . . . New territory for Simon that's definitely worth another chapter-- "Kirkus Reviews"
Vibrant descriptions . . . Readers with a taste for noir are sure to want to see more-- "Publishers Weekly on World Enough"
Witty observations, entertaining dialogue, and astute characterizations-- "Publishers Weekly on A Spell of Murder"