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Fiction: The Coffinmaker's Garden

A village on the edge… As a massive storm batters the Scottish coast, Gordon Smith s home is falling into the North Sea. But the crumbling headland has revealed what he s got buried in his garden: human remains. A house full of secrets… With the storm still raging, it s too dangerous to retrieve the bodies and waves are devouring the evidence. Which means no one knows how many people Smith s already killed and how many more he ll kill if he can t be found and stopped. An investigator with nothing to lose… The media are baying for blood, the top brass are after a scapegoat, and ex-Detective Inspector Ash Henderson is done playing nice. He s got a killer to catch, and God help anyone who gets in his way.

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Global police controversies make it harder to write stories about 'good cops' say crime writers

Updated: February 21, 2021, 7:08 pm © Supplied Sign up for our daily newsletter featuring the top stories from The Press and Journal. Thank you for signing up to The Press and Journal newsletter. Something went wrong - please try again later. Sign Up Two of Scotland’s top crime writers say it is more challenging to portray their police protagonists as heroes amid mounting global distrust of officers. Ian Rankin and Stuart MacBride discussed their work in one of the highlights of the weekend’s virtual Granite Noir crime-writing festival. The pair opened the award-winning event, which is produced by Aberdeen Performing Arts (APA), on Friday – setting the stage for a stellar line-up of authors from across Scotland, Scandinavia and the US.

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Fiction: The Coffinmaker's Garden

Too good to give back? Books worth thousands stuck on readers' shelves after pandemic library shut down

Thank you for signing up to The Courier daily newsletter Something went wrong - please try again later. Sign Up Readers in Fife, Tayside and Angus have escaped library fines totalling thousands of pounds during the coronavirus crisis. Books fans have kept hold of 44,456 overdue books in the area after the Covid-19 crisis threw return schedules into disarray. Scottish crime stalwarts Ian Rankin and Stuart MacBride join lesser known names – such as His Bloody Project writer Graeme Macrae Burnet – among the top writers least likely to have made it back onto library shelves. Many libraries across the region had previously managed to reopen in a limited form, but the latest virus guidance means outlets have again closed their doors.

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