Patrick’s Alphabet

8.99 JOD

Jordan: Deliverable within 48 hours
International: Deliverable within 7 Days

Description

When a teenage couple are found murdered in their car, a boy called Adam Sligo is the only suspect. The letter A is found blazoned on the wall at the murder scene and is soon followed, around town, by the other letters of the alphabet, each immaculately painted in red. What do the letters mean? Is Sligo playing games with the police? Or putting a spell on the town? Perry Scholes is mixed up in all this from the start: a man haunted by cars and death – and photographic images of both. He trawls the motorways and edgelands listening to police radio, getting to the car-crash or the crime scene before them. He makes a living selling these shots to the papers. He is the one who spots the painted letters, and begins to document their appearances. As the town is paralysed by fear and paranoia, a vigilante cult emerges, arming itself for the battle against evil. Perry finds himself trapped in a nightmare. A killer is at large, and the alphabetical messages he leaves seem to be personal messages for him.

Additional information

Weight 0.175 kg
Dimensions 1.7 × 13 × 19.7 cm
by

Format

Paperback

Language

Pages

240

Publisher

Year Published

2007-3-1

Imprint

Publication City/Country

London, United Kingdom

ISBN 10

0099483785

About The Author

Michael Symmons Roberts was born in Preston, Lancashire in 1963. His books of poetry have won many awards including the Forward Prize and the Costa Poetry Award for Drysalter (2013) and the Whitbread Poetry Prize for Corpus (2004). His Selected Poems was published by Cape in 2016. As a librettist, his work with composers has been performed in concert halls and opera houses around the world. The Sacrifice (for Welsh National Opera) with composer James MacMillan, won an RPS Award, and choral works Elliptics (for BBC Philharmonic) and The Anvil (for Manchester International Festival) with composer Emily Howard, were both nominated for Ivor Novello Awards. Non-fiction book Edgelands (with Paul Farley, 2011) won the Foyles Book of Ideas Award and the Jerwood Prize. He is an award-winning broadcaster and dramatist, Professor of Poetry at Manchester Metropolitan University and a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature.

His corpse-strewn first novel derives its title from St Patrick's habit of inscribing letters on new territory to transform it…the atmosphere of creeping menace kept this heathen reading, simultaneously irked and intrigued

Other text

Crafty, sad and haunting

Reviews

There are no reviews yet.

Only logged in customers who have purchased this product may leave a review.