by JamesCrumley (Author)
The new unputdownable thriller from the author of The Final Country, winner of the CWA Silver Dagger Award 2002.
You're only as tough as you feel. Take private eye C.W. Sughrue, ex-alcoholic and recovering gunshot victim. He thought he knew better than to do any work for Doctor Will Mac Mackindrick - even if he is his buddy. But 30,000 big ones does a whole lot of talking. So who's blackmailing Mac? One of his patients maybe?
Sughrue's first day on the job lives up to expectations when the wife of one of Mac's patients ends up headless with a noose round her neck - and Sughrue's pretty certain she won't be the only fatality. In fact, you can count on it. Six patients. That's six bodies...
Format: Paperback
Pages: 400
Publisher: HarperCollins
Published: 05 Jun 2006
ISBN 10: 0007130821
ISBN 13: 9780007130825
Praise for The Right Madness:
`The Poet Laureate of American hard-boiled literature, superior even to James Lee Burke. No-one writes likes Crumley...a dark and memorable quest for salvation against a background of unremitting violence. Deeply compelling.' Guardian
`Reading Crumely is like hurtling through an assault course. A rare and exhilarating stylist... he is funny, salty and ruthless. One of the marvels of contemporary crime writing. Nobody does it better. It's unlikely that anyone would dare to try.' Literary Review
`The old boy done good as usual. Long may he live!' Independent on Sunday
`This is pulp fiction at its most profane, visceral and poetic' Sunday Times
Praise for The Final Country:
`This is an extraordinary double-barrelled blast from a lost era. It's a two-fisted epic of Texan treachery, packed to the gunwales with sex, drugs, booze and guns.` Independent
`Lyrical, liberal, exciting and humane. Sexy, too, with a generosity that transcends taste and as violent as needs be.' Literary Review
`This complex thriller is so hardboiled it makes Ellroy and Connelly read like Simon and Garfunkel...it's good. Very good' Time Out
James Crumley was born in Three Rivers, Texas and spent most of his childhood in South Texas. He served three years in the US Army before teaching English as a visiting writer at the University of Texas at El Paso.