When a Scottish farmer finds his estranged brother's corpse hanging from a tree, the police claim suicide. But James Robertson is convinced of a cover-up, and hires private investigator, J McNee to uncover the secrets behind his brother's death.
With a pair of vicious London hard men loose in the Scottish city of Dundee, its only a matter of time before people start dying. McNee must confront his own demons and these brutal killers in a violence showdown that threatens to leave no one alive...
Nominated for the 2010 Shamus Awards in the US, this taut, psychologically acute crime novel marks the arrival of an exciting new voice in Scottish crime fiction, and is the first in the J McNee series
When a Scottish farmer finds his estranged brother’s corpse hanging from a tree, the police claim suicide. But James Robertson is convinced of a cover-up, and hires private investigator, J McNee to uncover the secrets behind his brother’s death.
With a pair of vicious London hard men loose in the Scottish city of Dundee, its only a matter of time before people start dying. McNee must confront his own demons and these brutal killers in a violence showdown that threatens to leave no one alive.
The Good Son evokes the dark streets of modern urban Scotland while paying homage the work of classic American authors such as Ross MacDonald and Dashiell Hammett. The result is “taught, tough and profoundly touching” (Sean Chercover, author of “Big City, Bad Blood” and “Trigger City”)
“I love McNee” – Robert Olen Butler, author of the Christopher Marlowe Cobb mysteries
“A really authentic and remarkable read!” Martina Cole on Ed’s Dead
Praise for THE GOOD SON
“the most exciting, and gripping, Scottish crime fiction debut of recent years.” John Connolly
“A thrilling new writer, a brilliant debut…The Good Son is very good indeed.” – Tony Black
“McNee is the most convincing British PI for a while.” – The Morning Star
“…an atmosphere of delicious gloom.” – Mystery Scene
“Clever, tough, witty… a great character study with a wonderful plot and plenty of atmosphere” – The Globe and Mail
“The future of crime fiction is in good hands” – Crimespree Magazine