The Confession

The Confession

by OlenSteinhauer (Author)

Synopsis

Eastern-bloc Europe, 1956.Ferenc Kolyeszar, homicide detective, is finding his life increasingly frustrating.His career as a published author appears to be at a standstill, his job is acquiring a political dimension that is making him uncomfortable, and his wife is cheating on him with a colleague. Then the celebrated painter Antonin Kullmann is found dead, his arms and legs shattered, his body set on fire. It's an exceptionally brutal murder and, as an artist himself, Ferenc becomes obsessed with solving the case. Peeling away the layers of deception and duplicity that surround the case, Ferenc discovers a secret - a secret with devastating repercussions, particularly in this politically turbulent time. As his country moves from a tenuous democracy into a brutal totalitarian state, Ferenc learns what it means to betray others, and what it means to be betrayed.

$9.53

Save:$10.57 (53%)

Quantity

Temporarily out of stock

More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 336
Edition: New e.
Publisher: Arrow
Published: 07 Jul 2005

ISBN 10: 009945338X
ISBN 13: 9780099453383
Book Overview: A man on the edge. A nation on the brink. A secret that could change it all.

Media Reviews
'Makes the hair on the back of your neck stand up' * Guardian *
'We can only marvel at the rumbling undertone of dread that Steinhauer builds around what appears to be a routine investigation of a suicide but turns out to be just the tip of a murderous political conspiracy' * New York Times Book Review *
'Steinhauer successfully conjures up the grey, dehumanised world of a nascent communist state, which provides a suitably chilling backdrop to his hero's quest to unearth a secret that threatens to ruin the lives of many' * Daily Mail *
'Good enough to suggest comparison with Graham Greene: places the author in the forefront of contemporary suspense writers' * Kirkus Review *
Author Bio
OLEN STEINHAUER was born in Virginia, USA and studied in Romania on a Fulbright scholarship. While there, he wrote The Bridge of Sighs, his highly acclaimed first novel. He lives in Budapest.