Orchid Blue

preview-18
  • Orchid Blue Book Detail

  • Author : Eoin McNamee
  • Release Date : 2010-11-04
  • Publisher : Faber & Faber
  • Genre : Fiction
  • Pages : 306
  • ISBN 13 : 057126946X
  • File Size : 25,25 MB

Orchid Blue by Eoin McNamee PDF Summary

Book Description: January 1961, and the beaten, stabbed and strangled body of a nineteen year old Pearl Gambol is discovered, after a dance the previous night at the Newry Orange Hall. Returning from London to investigate the case, Detective Eddie McCrink soon suspects that their may be people wielding influence over affairs, and that the accused, the enigmatic Robert McGladdery, may struggle to get a fair hearing. Presiding over the case is Lord Justice Curran, a man who nine years previously had found his own family in the news, following the murder of his nineteen year old daughter, Patricia. In a spectacular return to the territory of his acclaimed, Booker longlisted The Blue Tango, Eoin McNamee's new novel explores and dissects this notorious murder case which led to the final hanging on Northern Irish soil.

Disclaimer: www.yourbookbest.com does not own Orchid Blue books pdf, neither created or scanned. We just provide the link that is already available on the internet, public domain and in Google Drive. If any way it violates the law or has any issues, then kindly mail us via contact us page to request the removal of the link.

Orchid Blue

Orchid Blue

File Size : 66,66 MB
Total View : 5363 Views
DOWNLOAD

January 1961, and the beaten, stabbed and strangled body of a nineteen year old Pearl Gambol is discovered, after a dance the previous night at the Newry Orange

Orchid Blues

Orchid Blues

File Size : 86,86 MB
Total View : 3858 Views
DOWNLOAD

Stuart Woods brings back small-town police chief Holly Barker—and her extraordinary Doberman, Daisy—for another exhilarating adventure in this New York Time

Black Orchid Blues

Black Orchid Blues

File Size : 72,72 MB
Total View : 7440 Views
DOWNLOAD

This tale of a singer’s kidnapping in 1920s Harlem is “the best kind of historical mystery” (Lee Child). Lanie Price, a Harlem society columnist, witnesse