The Detective's Daughter
- 496pages
- 18 heures de lecture
A tense, evocative thriller set on the freezing banks of the Thames. A woman reconnects with her dead father by solving the murder case that obsessed him in life.
Cette série suit une jeune femme vive et pleine de ressources qui utilise ses compétences uniques pour résoudre des affaires de meurtre. Possédant des capacités déductives héritées de son père policier, elle plonge dans des endroits sombres pour découvrir la vérité. Son approche non conventionnelle, appliquant des méthodes de nettoyage aux enquêtes, écarte les couches de tromperie pour révéler le meurtrier. Les lecteurs apprécieront les mystères captivants et une protagoniste féminine forte et intelligente.
A tense, evocative thriller set on the freezing banks of the Thames. A woman reconnects with her dead father by solving the murder case that obsessed him in life.
A year after her father's death, the detective's daughter inherits a strange new case. Terry Darnell was a detective with Hammersmith police. Now his daughter Stella has found a folder of photographs hidden in his cellar. Why did he take so many picture of deserted London streets? One photo dates from 1966, to a day when a little girl, just ten years old, witnessed something that would haunt her forever. As Stella grows obsessed with uncovering the truth, the events of that day begin to haunt her too... THE DETECTIVE'S DAUGHTER SERIES: The Detective's Daughter. Ghost Girl. The Detective's Secret.
Stella Darnell, the Detective's Daughter, investigates a twenty-year-old unsolved murder.
Stella Darnell, the Detective's Daughter, investigates a decades-old mystery in Kew Gardens.
Stella Darnell is the detective's daughter. She's convinced she's found a crime scene. But what was the crime, and who was the victim?
A new case for sees Stella, the detective's daughter, and Jack moving to the country in order to solve a cold case.
When a woman is found dead, and the killer is linked to the murder of a little girl in 1980, Stella is the woman for the case. But dredging up the past can be dangerous...