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Dead or Alive

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A former Yorkshire Det. Inspector must clear his name, expose a traitor, and catch a kidnapper in this debut that “hits every note for a gritty procedural” (Publishers Weekly).
 
Two children have been abducted on their way home from school. After several weeks, they are still missing—and no one knows if they are alive or dead. The police are certain that Vince Formosa, a ruthless local gangster, is behind the kidnapping. But without proof their hands are tied.
 
After a disgraced politician dies in his custody, Detective Inspector Septimus “Sep” Black is forced to resign. He knows he’s been set up, but how does he prove it and stay alive in the process? Convinced that Formosa has a mole inside the department, Black sets out to expose the conspiracy and get his revenge on the man who brought him down. But to do it, he must find the missing girls—and that means going undercover among some of the most notorious criminals in Leeds.
 
“McCoy tells his tale with great dash—plus plenty of tension and violence—and he brightens it with doses of English-major wit.” —Booklist
 
“The well-constructed narrative unfolds in an entertaining manner. A solid choice for Peter Robinson and Reginald Hill fans.” —Library Journal
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      August 29, 2016
      Det. Insp. Septimus “Sep” Black, the hero of this middling series launch set in Yorkshire from McCoy (Mad Carew), is having a bad week. He’s convinced that a dirty cop has relocated just to bring him down, his estranged wife has accused him of beating her and won’t let him see their young daughter, a politician accused of child abuse has died while in his custody, and a powerful criminal has kidnapped two children. After a violent outburst in a bar, Sep asks for help and is sent to a psychiatric ward. He’s sure things can’t get worse, but they do, and when he’s released, he goes undercover to find those kids and clear his name. McCoy hits every note for a gritty procedural, including two sadistic henchmen that crack wise and kill with impunity, but this everything-but-the-kitchen-sink approach never rises above cliché, and the violence often feels gratuitous. Disjointed storytelling—Sep goes from just taking a break from his marriage to never really getting along with his wife in a hot minute—further mars this ho-hum effort.

    • Library Journal

      October 1, 2016

      The northern English city of Leeds is not London, but crime happens everywhere. DI Septimus Ruddigore Black knows the new detective on the force is bent; Lenny Cope fled London when an investigation was launched into his connections to local crime lord Vincent Formosa. When two children are kidnapped, the gangster's fingerprints are all over the action. Dead bodies begin to pile up as Formosa, who always seems to be a step ahead of the police, cleans house. Black is forced to resign after a suspect dies in custody. How will he be able to clear his name, restore his reputation, bring down Formosa, and regain his badge? VERDICT McCoy (Perseverance Street; "Sam Carew" mysteries) launches a new crime series featuring a prototypical British police officer who holds his cards close to the vest and doesn't allow anyone to get too close. The well-constructed narrative unfolds in an entertaining manner. A solid choice for Peter Robinson and Reginald Hill fans.

      Copyright 2016 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Booklist

      October 15, 2016
      McCoy offers his take on a familiar crime-fiction character: the policeman or ex-policeman with a chaotic private life and an overenthusiastic manner on the job. The troubled cop here is Detective Inspector Sep Black of the West Yorkshire Police, sacked after an obnoxious, boozed-up politician dies in his custody. Black's scheme for getting his job back requires suspension of disbelief: he disguises himself as a lowlife and offers to snitch for the cop who helped can him. Fortunately, the author notes with a slug of irony, Black's redemption is helped by kidnapping and white-slavery schemes. McCoy tells his tale with great dashplus plenty of tension and violenceand he brightens it with doses of English-major wit. Black and a therapist discuss Hamlet, a pipe-smoking prostitute wises him up on Socrates, and Black goes through his day reflecting on Woody Guthrie. And his interrogation methods, described in some detail, are fun to watch. Dealing with lowlifes and being honest never work together, he says at one point, requiring one to Tell the truth to start. Lie later. Familiar, yes, but satisfying, too.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2016, American Library Association.)

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