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Coleman introduces superb detective novel

Gus Murphy was looking forward to retirement after a distinguished career as a Long Island policeman, but when his son dropped dead of an undiagnosed heart defect during a pickup basketball game, Gus’s life all but ended, too.

That‘s when Tommy Delcamino, a small-time crook Gus used to arrest, shows up looking for help. Tommy’s son is dead, too, gunned down in a mysterious murder the Suffolk County police show little interest in solving. 

"Where It Hurts" By Reed Farrel Coleman (G.P. Putnam‘s Sons)

At first, Gus wants no part of it and sends Tommy packing. But Gus understands Tommy‘s pain. So reluctantly, he finally agrees to poke into it.

As he digs into a case, Gus gradually uncovers a web of drug dealing and corruption that makes him, and many of the people who know about it, murder targets. For Gus, the case turns into a cause, and in it, he finds a reason to go on living.

That is the premise of “Where It Hurts,” the beginning of a new series by Reed Farrel Coleman. As the author of the Moe Prager detective series and several fine stand-alone crime novels, Coleman has long been one of the best crime novelists in the business. “Where It Hurts” is a superb detective novel in the Raymond Chandler tradition, featuring fine prose, a suspenseful yarn and a compelling main character who will leave readers hungering for the next installment. (AP)
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