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The Bloomsday Dead by Adrian McKinty: Allen and Unwin

 

The Bloomsday Dead by Adrian McKinty: Allen and Unwin

Irish exile Forsythe is back on home turf to trace a missing girl in this pacey, explosive thriller from Melbourne based author, Adrian McKinty.

Michael Forysthe might be, as one of his assailants puts it, 'un-fucking-killable', but that doesn't seem to deter people from trying. He's living in Lima, reasonably well-hidden by the FBI's Witness Protection Program, but Bridget Callaghan, whose fiance he murdered twelve years ago, has an enduring wish to see him dead. So when he two goon assassins pass him the phone to speak to her before they kill him, Michael thinks she just wants to relish the moment. In fact, out of desperation, she is giving him a chance to redeem himself. All he has to do is return to Ireland and find her daughter. Before midnight.

Tenacious and brutal, with the hunted man's instinct for trouble, Forysthe leaves a trail of mayhem as he tries to end the bloody feud once and for all. The Bloomsday Dead pulsates with break-neck action and wry literary references; McKinty's distinctly Irish voice packs a ferocious punch.

About Adrian McKinty
Adrian McKinty was born and grew up in Carrickfergus, Northern Ireland at the height of the Troubles. He studied politics at Oxford University and after a failed legal career he moved to the US in the early 1990s. He found work as a security guard, postman, construction worker, barman, rugby coach and bookstore clerk before becoming a school teacher in Denver. In early 2008, McKinty moved to Melbourne and is now working at Monash University.

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Member comments

keikomushi
Reviewing Bloomsday Dead
By: keikomushi at 22 August, 2008 - 19:45

Well, I only just got the book but given the pace of the first chapter of Bloomsday Dead, I anticipate that this puppy will be worth producing a podcast review about when I have finished reading it. I will keep you guys posted on this one, but it could take a while given that I also have another book to review. In the meantime, I will be posting other podcast reviews at http://reviewcentral.mevio.com so feel free to drop by and/or leave comments via the blog companion http://reviewcentralpodcast.blogspot.com.

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LeBard
Write a Review
By: LeBard at 13 August, 2008 - 22:12

Hello Booktaggers,

We think free books are great, we've been very grateful for the free books we've received from Publishers. I hope you are too :). If you've received a free book please write a review for it. We all want to know what you thought of the book (and it was a condition of receipt).

To write a review hover over the book and select Book info. Then on the Books profile page select Write a review from the menu next to the book image.

I look forward to hearing what you think of the books you've been reading lately.

Kind Regards,

Jeremy
Booktagger

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awaywithfairies
Bloody and repetitive
By: awaywithfairies at 29 July, 2008 - 16:13

Not an author I've heard of before so I thought I'd give this book a go. Quite bloodthisty and brutal, and strangely repetitive. Our hero meets an Irish gangster, shoots him in cold blood and then escapes. Our hero meets another Irish gangster, shoots him in cold blood and then escapes. Repeat ad nauseum. You get the picture. And a fairly predictable ending.

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