The Restless Dead

The Restless Dead is the fifth novel in writer Simon Beckett's Doctor David Hunter crime series. It was first published in English in April 2017.

The Restless Dead
First edition
AuthorSimon Beckett
CountryUnited Kingdom
LanguageEnglish
SeriesDavid Hunter
Release number
5
GenreCrime, Mystery
Set inEssex, England
PublisherBantam Books
Publication date
6 April 2017
Media typeHardback book
Pages404
ISBN978-0593-06347-7
Preceded byThe Calling of the Grave 
Followed byThe Scent of Death 

Plot

Dr Hunter is back working in London and at a low ebb professionally as he was the scapegoat for what went wrong in the last novel (The Calling of the Grave). When a call comes out of the blue from a Detective Inspector in Essex about recovering a body from some tidal mudflats, Hunter jumps at the chance to be working for the police again.[1]

The body is thought to be that of a wealthy young man who went missing only Dr Hunter is not convinced and actually proves the body is not that of the missing man.

The setting is the coast of Essex with an estuary and its many inlets and narrow waterways. The bodies and the mysteries pile up with Hunter also getting too close to some of the major suspects and a possible resurgence of an old character at the end.[2][3]

Publishing

Due to Simon Beckett's popularity in Germany, the book was published in German as Totenfang (German: Catch of [the] Dead) in October 2016 some 6 months before the United Kingdom release.[4]

gollark: Governments probably wouldn't unless they're being really experimental for some reason, yes, since unless they make themselves the only issuers they can't muck with the money supply all the time.
gollark: Proof of work is wildly wasteful, proof of stake is just built-in inequality, and I don't know of any saner ways.
gollark: My main problem with cryptocurrencies is the fact that they end up needing to replicate unreasonably large amounts of data everywhere, and allocation of coins is a hard problem without any reasonably good solutions.
gollark: You obviously run into the issue of "what if the key is leaked", though.
gollark: Hypothetically you could have a cryptocurrency where only the government can issue a coin - instead of mining it (proof of work), it would just be digitally signed by a government key.

References

  1. Smith, Joan (16 April 2017). "Single-minded pursuit of the truth: crime round-up". The Sunday Times. ProQuest 1888429069.
  2. Craig, Matt (4 April 2017). "An Interview with SIMON BECKETT". Reader Dad - Book Reviews. Retrieved 7 April 2017.
  3. "Great new reads for April, in libraries now - Knowsley News". knowsleynews.co.uk. Retrieved 7 April 2017.
  4. Lea, Richard (11 January 2017). "Found in translation: the English-language writers who succeed abroad". The Guardian. Retrieved 7 April 2017.
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