A man’s corpse is discovered in a Rotherhithe warehouse, chopped up, boiled to avoid identification, and bundled into five Waitrose carrier bags. Our nameless narrator from A14 – the ‘Unexplained Deaths’ division of the Met – is put on the case. Operating, as usual, with his wit and sheer nerve in place of adequate resources and contacts, the narrator’s investigations uncover much more than the murderer. As he probes a world of horror in South London, a terrible secret from his own past emerges. ‘A bizarre mixture of Chandleresque elegance… and naked brutality’ Daily Telegraph ‘Hellishly bleak and moving’ New Statesman ‘Superb… an English Chandler… only better’ Daily Mail
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Derek Raymond was born Robin Cook in 1931. His novels include A State of Denmark, The Crust on its Uppers, I Was Dora Suarez and How the Dead Live, which was made into a film. The son of a textile magnate, he dropped out of Eton aged sixteen and spent much of his early career among criminals and was employed at various times as a pornographer, organiser of illegal gambling, money launderer, pig-slaughterer and minicab driver. He died in London in 1994.