The Darkest Game - (LAPD Detective Tully Jarsdel Mysteries) by Joseph Schneider (Paperback)
About this item
Highlights
- The past is steeped in blood.Bad things happen every day.
- Author(s): Joseph Schneider
- 336 Pages
- Fiction + Literature Genres, Mystery & Detective
- Series Name: LAPD Detective Tully Jarsdel Mysteries
Description
About the Book
Includes a reading group guide and an excerpt from What waits for you.Book Synopsis
The past is steeped in blood.
Bad things happen every day. No one knows this better than LAPD Detective Tully Jarsdel. He also knows that bad things often go unpunished--all it takes is a glance at his dusty stack of cold cases to see that time is kind to sinners.
A museum curator is found shot point-blank, his home torn apart. It's the sort of random crime destined to fester in an evidence locker. But it's a case tailor-made for the academic turned detective--he can't leave any question unanswered. In pursuit of an untouchable killer, Jarsdel soon uncovers a web of fraud and corruption that leads him to sunny Catalina Island, Hollywood's bygone playground. There, nothing is as it should be: the past is ever-present, and Jarsdel unwittingly finds himself embroiled in a widespread conspiracy. While reckoning with a dark legacy, he'll exhume long-buried secrets of LA's troubled past and with it, deadly consequences.
A searing mystery from critically acclaimed author Joseph Schneider, The Darkest Game is a story about dread, greed, and anguish; how it spreads like rot, and how one detective struggles to keep it at bay.
Review Quotes
" One of the most fascinating detectives to have come along in years, Tully Jarsdel isn't your typical cop.
" -- First Clue
"Assured prose and distinctive characters...this deeply intelligent novel will reward thoughtful readers." -- Publishers Weekly
"Juicy prose redolent of classic noir, with contemporary twists.A cunning killer cuts a murderous swath through the LA art world...Schneider's choice of backdrop gives him carte blanche to pepper his tale with historic and artistic tidbits about both the collection and the institution itself.
" -- Kirkus Reviews