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The Burning Man

A Peculiar Crimes Unit Mystery

#12 in series

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
No case is too curious for Arthur Bryant and John May, London’s most ingenious detectives. But with their beloved city engulfed in turmoil, they’ll have to work fast to hold a sinister killer’s feet to the fire.
In the week before Guy Fawkes Night, London’s peaceful streets break out in sudden unrest. Enraged by a scandal involving a corrupt financier accused of insider trading, demonstrators are rioting outside the Findersbury Private Bank, chanting, marching, and growing violent. But when someone hurls a Molotov cocktail at the bank’s front door, killing a homeless man on its steps, Bryant, May, and the rest of the Peculiar Crimes Unit is called in. Is this an act of protest gone terribly wrong? Or a devious, premeditated murder?
Their investigation heats up when a second victim is reported dead in similar fiery circumstances. May discovers the latest victim has ties to the troubled bank, and Bryant refuses to believe this is mere coincidence. As the riots grow more intense and the body count climbs, Bryant and May hunt for a killer who’s adopting incendiary methods of execution, on a snaking trail of clues with roots in London’s history of rebellion, anarchy, and harsh justice. Now, they’ll have to throw themselves in the line of fire before the entire investigation goes up in smoke.
Suspenseful, smart, and wickedly funny, Bryant & May and the Burning Man is a brilliantly crafted mystery from the beloved Christopher Fowler.
Praise for Bryant & May and the Burning Man
“Fabulously unorthodox . . . [Fowler] takes delight in stuffing his books with esoteric facts; together with a cast of splendidly eccentric characters [and] corkscrew plots, wit, verve and some apposite social commentary, they make for unbeatable fun.”The Guardian
“Winningly eccentric . . . The books are set in a skillful synthesis of a phantasmagorical earlier era and the modern age.”Financial Times
“The most delightfully, wickedly entertaining duo in crime fiction . . . Fowler’s tale is a rich mix of laugh-out-loud lines, acerbic wit, obscure British history and a wonderfully puzzling story. Grade: A—The Plain Dealer
“Fowler is even better than usual at getting readers to care about his squad of misfits.”Publishers Weekly
“Not even Arthur Bryant’s alarming behavior can dampen the twelfth installment in the most joyously inventive mystery series of our time.”Kirkus Reviews
“Fascinating and intriguing . . . This book is definitely a standalone novel that keeps the reader absorbed in the story, and will make everyone want to go back and read them all. . . . This is a very solid story and a great addition to Fowler’s long-running series. The mystery is fascinating and readers will definitely want to know what happens next. And for newcomers to the series, this will be an excellent place to start.”Suspense Magazine
“Fans of the Bryant and May series will welcome this latest installment with plenty of obscure historical details mixed with outré crimes and the banter of the PCU members. Newcomers will find plenty to enjoy as well without finding the amount of details included from earlier outings overwhelming.”Library Journal
“Witty with a dry sense of humor . . . finely plotted . . . complex and funny.”RT Book Reviews
“A fascinating investigation with lots of false leads and a plethora...
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      September 21, 2015
      The onset of a form of dementia for series lead Arthur Bryant adds poignancy to Fowler’s 12th Peculiar Crimes Unit mystery (after 2014’s Bryant & May and the Bleeding Heart). When London is convulsed by massive riots sparked by the revelation that banker Dexter Cornell walked away from his partnership with millions, despite having cheated the bank’s customers out of their savings, the unit seeks to restore public order. As the protestors’ looting and arson continue, someone fatally torches Freddie Weeks, a recent employee of a sustainable food market who was sleeping rough on the streets. Weeks’s killing is followed by others, committed in particularly sadistic fashion, but with no obvious link among the victims. A diagnosis of a rare cognitive disorder raises doubts about Bryant’s fitness to serve with the PCU. The solution may disappoint a bit, but Fowler is even better than usual at getting readers to care about his squad of misfits. Agent: Howard Morhaim, Howard Morhaim Literary Agency.

    • Kirkus

      October 1, 2015
      As riots send London into flaming chaos, the Peculiar Crimes Squad fights to solve a series of daily killings that have slipped under everyone else's radar. The likely insider trading of Dexter Cornell, a slippery partner in the Findersbury Private Bank, has so incensed Londoners that they've taken to the streets and torched buildings. In the midst of it all, a Molotov cocktail that kills a man sleeping on the bank steps brings in the PCU, whose takeover by the City of London has tightened the screws once again ("no more pawning items from the Evidence Room until payday].No selfies at crime scenes") on its free-wheeling senior detectives, Arthur Bryant and John May. The unit's ramrod new liaison, Superintendent Darren "Missing" Link, insists that their help be limited to identifying the corpse, but once they've tagged him as Freddie Weeks, ironically dubbed "Lucky" by his friends, their involvement rapidly snowballs. Aided by the CCTV cameras that seem to track every furtive movement in the city, they soon realize that this first victim was deliberately targeted by someone who seems determined to add a new corpse to their workload every day, some of the victims linked to the despicable Cornell, all of their ghoulish deaths linked by fire. Even worse, Mr. May sees that Mr. Bryant has been acting even more erratically than usual, no mean feat given Bryant's flamboyant history (Bryant & May and the Bleeding Heart, 2014, etc.). As the calendar ticks down to Guy Fawkes Day, Bryant and May and their junior colleagues race to catch the killer. Even though the ending fizzles this time, not even Arthur Bryant's alarming behavior can dampen the 12th installment in the most joyously inventive mystery series of our time.

      COPYRIGHT(2015) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Library Journal

      November 15, 2015

      During a week of massive and sometimes violent demonstrations by antibank protesters in London, a young, homeless man is burned to death as he sleeps on the steps of a bank. The rest of the police force is busy with the protests, so the Peculiar Crimes Unit (PCU) is assigned the case. As the week progresses from Halloween to Guy Fawkes Day, more murders involving the creative use of fire are committed, and Bryant and May begin to realize they are all connected, to each other, if not the demonstrations. With threats to their unit and the city they've sworn to protect mounting daily, the two elderly detectives rush to uncover the links between the crimes and the identity of the killer in the hopes of saving London and their jobs. VERDICT Fans of the "Bryant and May" series will welcome this latest installment (after Bryant and May and the Bleeding Heart) with plenty of obscure historical details mixed with outre crimes and the banter of the PCU members. Newcomers will find plenty to enjoy as well without finding the amount of details included from earlier outings overwhelming. [See Prepub Alert, 6/8/15.]--Dan Forrest, Western Kentucky Univ. Libs., Bowling Green

      Copyright 2015 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Library Journal

      July 1, 2015

      British author Fowler has been nominated by the Independent Mystery Booksellers Association for the Dilys Winn Award, given to titles booksellers really loved pushing, and The Victoria Vanishes won CrimeFest's Goldsboro Last Laugh Award for funniest mystery. Just so you know what you're in for here. Troubling little incidents in the run-up to Guy Fawkes Day get octogenarian detective Arthur Bryant out of bed after surgery and searching through the Peculiar Crimes Unit archives, to suddenly see the light regarding ten unsolved cases--all figuring in previous series titles and all related to the current incidents.

      Copyright 2015 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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