
Price: $17.99 - $0.99
(as of Apr 30, 2025 08:44:17 UTC – Details)
In view of the 1746 battle of Kaloden, an entertaining historical thriller was set in Invertus.
‘This piece of historical stories takes you on a wild ride’
After Kaloden, Ian McGilivere was left dead on the drumosy Moore. The injured, his face slipped brutally, he survived only by pretending to be dead because Radkotes patrolled the corpses of his jacobite peers.
Six years later, the clan’s heads were rooted and the highlands joined the British state, Ian live a quiet life, who serve as a bookseller in Inverter. One day, after helping many of his regular customers, he saw a stranger in the upper gallery of his shop, who porches his collection. But the man refuses to say what he is searching and only leaves when Ian stops for the night.
The next morning Ian’s shop opens and the stranger dead, cut into her neck, and the weapon of murder in front of her – a sword with a white cock, a sword with a symbol of jacobtes. As the killer had no indication, Ian surprised whether the stranger discovered what he was watching – and whether he paid for it with his life. He soon finds himself entangled in a web of deception and a range of old scores is settled in the ashes of war.
,
Praise for Bookseller of Inverters
‘Fresh and complicated. , , His best yet ‘Andrew Taylor’
‘Everything you can ask a historical thriller’ Antonia Hodgson
‘A complex coined, essentially page-turning tail’ Craig Russell
‘A First Rate Historical Thriller’ 5* Reader Review
‘From the moment I started reading, I was hooking 5* reader review
‘Very entertaining. , , Rapid book, twist and twist ‘5* reader reviews
Asin: B0B9MHXJWB
Publisher: Quercus (August 4, 2022)
Publication date: August 4, 2022
language English
File Size: 3.0 MB
Text-to-speech: competent
Screen reader: Supported
Increased Typesetting: Competent
X-ray: competent
Word War: Competent
Print Length: 331 page
Customers say
Customers find the book well-researched and engaging, with an interesting story that weaves historical elements into its plot. They appreciate the character development, with one customer noting how the plain prose fits well with the subject era and characters.
Leave a Reply