The distant echo

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It's four in the morning, mid-December, and snow blankets St. Andrews School. Student Alex Gilbey and his three best friends are staggering home from a party when they stumble upon the body of a young woman. Rosie Duff has been raped, stabbed, and left for dead in the ancient Pictish cemetery. And the only suspects are the four young students with her blood.Twenty-five years later, police mount a cold-case review. Among the unsolved murders they're examining is that of Rosie Duff. But someone else has his own idea of how justice should be served. One of the original quartet dies in a suspicious house fire. Soon after, a second is killed in what looks like a burglary gone sour. But Alex fears the worst: Someone is taking revenge for Rosie Duff. He has to find out who it is before he becomes the next victim. And it might just save his life if he can uncover who really killed Rosie all those years ago.

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Contributors
Cotcher, Tom Narrator
McDermid, Val Author
ISBN
9780312994839
9781429977623
9781250093158
9781250292872

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Also in this Series

  • The distant echo (Karen Pirie novels Volume 1) Cover
  • A darker domain: a novel (Karen Pirie novels Volume 2) Cover
  • The skeleton road (Karen Pirie novels Volume 3) Cover
  • Out of bounds (Karen Pirie novels Volume 4) Cover
  • Broken ground (Karen Pirie novels Volume 5) Cover
  • Still life (Karen Pirie novels Volume 6) Cover
  • Past lying (Karen Pirie novels Volume 7) Cover

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Similar Series From Novelist

NoveList provides detailed suggestions for series you might like if you enjoyed this book. Suggestions are based on recommendations from librarians and other contributors.
Marked by twisty plots and a gritty feel, these suspenseful Scotland-based mysteries star smart, likable police detectives working the cold case squad (Karen Pirie) and the "Screw-up Squad" (Logan McRae). -- Mike Nilsson
Though Karen Pirie focuses on cold cases and Lincoln Rhyme works in the here and now, these intriguing mystery series will appeal to readers who like an equal balance between fast-paced action and intricately constructed plots. -- Stephen Ashley
Though set very different places, the Scotland-based Karen Pirie novels and the Denmark-based Department Q tales are both distinguished by intricate plotting, a fast pace, and interesting protagonists. Karen Pirie is a grittier while Department Q is more violent. -- Mike Nilsson
Likeable investigators (Karen Pirie is an officer specializing in cold cases, while Clay Edison is a deputy coroner) take on gritty, sometimes disturbing crimes in both of these suspenseful and fast-paced mystery series. -- Stephen Ashley
Starring indefatigable female detectives in Edinburgh, Scotland (the philosophical Karen Pirie novels) and a seedy, poverty-ridden Glasgow (the bleak Alex Morrow novels), these gritty mysteries feature intricate plots and a strong sense of place. -- Mike Nilsson
Though Karen Pirie is faster paced than the more leisurely Thomas Lynley, these UK-set police procedural mystery series both feature twisty, intricately crafted plots and plenty of suspense. -- Stephen Ashley
Though Karen Pirie is a bit grittier than Under Suspicion, both of these suspenseful, fast-paced mysteries follow unlikely sleuths who frequently take on unsolved cold cases. -- Stephen Ashley
Though Karen Pirie investigates colder cases than Eve Duncan, both of these fast-paced series follow strong women detectives who use their skills to reconstruct details of crimes in order to solve twisty cases. -- Stephen Ashley
These suspenseful, gritty, detail-forward mystery series both star keen-eyed investigators who use their particular skill sets (Kay Scarpetta is a medical examiner, and Karen Pirie specializes in cold cases) to investigate twisted crimes. -- Stephen Ashley

Similar Titles From NoveList

NoveList provides detailed suggestions for titles you might like if you enjoyed this book. Suggestions are based on recommendations from librarians and other contributors.
NoveList recommends "Lincoln Rhyme mysteries" for fans of "Karen Pirie novels". Check out the first book in the series.
NoveList recommends "Clay Edison novels" for fans of "Karen Pirie novels". Check out the first book in the series.
NoveList recommends "Under suspicion (Mary Higgins Clark)" for fans of "Karen Pirie novels". Check out the first book in the series.
NoveList recommends "Eve Duncan novels" for fans of "Karen Pirie novels". Check out the first book in the series.
NoveList recommends "Department Q" for fans of "Karen Pirie novels". Check out the first book in the series.
NoveList recommends "Alex Morrow novels" for fans of "Karen Pirie novels". Check out the first book in the series.
NoveList recommends "Women's Murder Club" for fans of "Karen Pirie novels". Check out the first book in the series.
These books have the appeal factors suspenseful and fast-paced, and they have the genres "mysteries" and "adult books for young adults"; and the subjects "murder suspects," "murder," and "murder investigation."
These books have the appeal factors disturbing, haunting, and atmospheric, and they have the subjects "college students," "murder suspects," and "crimes against young women."
NoveList recommends "Thomas Lynley mysteries" for fans of "Karen Pirie novels". Check out the first book in the series.
NoveList recommends "Logan McRae mysteries" for fans of "Karen Pirie novels". Check out the first book in the series.
NoveList recommends "Kay Scarpetta mysteries" for fans of "Karen Pirie novels". Check out the first book in the series.

Similar Authors From NoveList

NoveList provides detailed suggestions for other authors you might want to read if you enjoyed this book. Suggestions are based on recommendations from librarians and other contributors.
Though Val McDermid's mysteries are contemporary and Anne Perry's are historical, each pens bleak, atmospheric tales, written in elegant language, with strong characters and intricate, issue-oriented plots. -- NoveList Contributor
Laurie R. King and Val McDermid offer strong characterizations, especially of women; provocative stories that explore abuse and other social ills; and darkly atmospheric tales imbued with drama and psychological undertones. -- Krista Biggs
Like Val McDermid's mysteries, Sara Paretsky's feature a focus on issues in contemporary women's lives, incorporate an urban setting, and explore the political and societal landscape of that setting through complicated plotting. -- Bethany Latham
Denise Mina and Val McDermid are Scottish authors that focus on the psychological aspects of their chilling mysteries, creating characters that are fully realized, if disturbing. Both authors feature strong women protagonists and gritty urban settings. -- Victoria Fredrick
British women writers P.D. James and Val McDermid masterfully combine the specifics of forensic science with brisk plots and excellent, detailed characterization. -- Shauna Griffin
Both A.D. Garrett and Val McDermid write gritty police procedurals with complex, tough women as their detectives. Set in Scottish and English urban centers, these mysteries use complex plotting, crisp dialogue, and graphic violence to show the dark underbelly of society. The fast paced stories build in suspense. -- Merle Jacob
These authors' works have the subjects "police," "cold cases (criminal investigation)," and "women detectives."

Published Reviews

Booklist Review

DNA technology has breathed new life into cases long comatose, extending both the long arm of the law and the scope of crime writers. British writer McDermid, who has won the prestigious Anthony, Macavity, and Gold Dagger awards, uses the new technology to resurrect the murder of a teenage girl in St. Andrew's, Scotland, 25 years ago. McDermid's 400-page novel gives equal time to two years: 1978, the year of the murder, and 2003, the year the Cold Case Squad in Fife reopened it. Part 1 focuses on four St. Andrew's University students who, reeling home after a night partying, literally stumble upon Rosie Duff's body in a field. This section starts the nightmare that deepens throughout, as the students become, first, suspects and then targets of hatred when lack of evidence fails to convict them, except in the public mind. Part 2 reopens both the old case and old wounds and adroitly moves between the investigation of Rosie's murder and the investigation of a killer bent on avenging it. McDermid uses the brooding, craggy Scottish landscape evocatively; two scenes of peril, one in the North Sea, the other in a dungeon in St. Andrew's Castle, are especially chilling. McDermid, whose reputation and popularity are growing incrementally with each new book, is very like P. D. James in her masterful mixing of forensic science with brisk plots and in-depth characterization. --Connie Fletcher Copyright 2003 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
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Publisher's Weekly Review

This absorbing psychological novel of revenge shows British author McDermid (A Place of Execution) at the top of her form. In part one, set in 1978 in St. Andrews, Scotland, four drunken male students, friends since childhood, stumble over the raped and stabbed body of a dying woman, Rosie Duff, while staggering home through a snow storm. Though her violent brothers are convinced of their guilt, no one is charged with Rosie's murder. In part two, 25 years later, the police hope new forensic technologies will solve the crime, and suddenly someone is stalking the four men, whose lives have been haunted and their relationships changed by the murder. Two die, supposedly by accident, and the remaining pair, Alex Gilbey and Tom Mackie, must find out what happened before they're killed, too. James Lawson, an assistant chief constable who was a junior cop in 1978, wants to close the case and avenge the death of his admired superior, DI Barney Maclennan, who fell from a cliff during the initial inquiry. When Graham Macfadyen, who claims he's Rosie's illegitimate son and also seeking revenge, contacts Lawson, the investigation takes a startling turn. Only the careful reader will anticipate the stunning conclusion, which makes perfect sense. Outstanding pacing, character and plot development, plus evocative place descriptions, make this another winner. (Oct. 20) Forecast: The author has had an eager audience since A Place of Execution (2000) won a number of prestigious awards, including the Anthony and Macavity. Lacking the gruesome forensic detail of some of her other books, this latest should draw additional readers as well as viewers of the recent TV adaptation of her Gold Dagger-winning novel, The Mermaids Singing (1995). (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
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Library Journal Review

Winter of 1978, St. Andrews University, Scotland. Four drunken young students on their way home from a party stumble upon local barmaid Rosie Duff, who has been raped, stabbed, and left to die. Unable to save her, the men become suspects in the case but are never formally charged. The stigma and shame of the experience follows these men into their adult lives. About 25 years later, two of the four men have been murdered. The remaining two, Alex Gilbery and the Rev. Tom Mackie, must identify their friends' killer before they become the next victims of this revenge murder spree. Having grown up on the east coast of Scotland, where this story takes place, McDermid (Killing the Shadows) ably depicts St. Andrews. The cast of characters is almost too large to allow the reader to get to know and care about them. Still, McDermid keeps the suspense rising until the end, even after the astute reader will have figured out the killer's identity. Recommended for public libraries.-Jane la Plante, Minot State Univ. Lib., ND (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
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Kirkus Book Review

New forensic breakthroughs reopen a 25-year-old cold case. In the meantime, most of the forensic evidence has disappeared from the Fife storage lockup, and two of the four principal suspects have moved to the States. Still, Assistant Chief Constable James Lawson, who was a young copper patrolling the snowbound streets that December night, seems determined to prove the young students who fell over the body of pretty barmaid Rosie Duff on their drunken way home really did rape and kill her. These days, Ziggy is a much-admired gay pediatrician in Seattle; Tom is a born-again Christian proselytizing in the South; Mondo is a snobbish literature professor in Glasgow; and Alex, married to Mondo's sister Lynn, manufactures greeting cards in Edinburgh. But Rosie's two brothers haven't forgotten or forgiven, and her illegitimate son Graham is skulking about with vengeance in mind. All of them are spurring on Lawson, who seems to be making no headway on the case. Then, suddenly, Ziggy dies in an arson fire, Mondo becomes an intruder's victim, Tom is waylaid while visiting Alex, and Alex's new baby is abducted at a petrol station. Mere coincidence, says Lawson, but a chip of paint will prove him wrong. McDermid, putting aside her fondness for serial killers (The Last Temptation, 2002, etc.), masterfully presents the 1978 portion of her story but stumbles so badly with melodramatic present-tense plot quirks that readers will be well ahead of Lawson in naming Rosie's killer. Copyright ©Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
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Booklist Reviews

/*Starred Review*/ DNA technology has breathed new life into cases long comatose, extending both the long arm of the law and the scope of crime writers. British writer McDermid, who has won the prestigious Anthony, Macavity, and Gold Dagger awards, uses the new technology to resurrect the murder of a teenage girl in St. Andrew's, Scotland, 25 years ago. McDermid's 400-page novel gives equal time to two years: 1978, the year of the murder, and 2003, the year the Cold Case Squad in Fife reopened it. Part 1 focuses on four St. Andrew's University students who, reeling home after a night partying, literally stumble upon Rosie Duff's body in a field. This section starts the nightmare that deepens throughout, as the students become, first, suspects and then targets of hatred when lack of evidence fails to convict them, except in the public mind. Part 2 reopens both the old case and old wounds and adroitly moves between the investigation of Rosie's murder and the investigation of a killer bent on avenging it. McDermid uses the brooding, craggy Scottish landscape evocatively; two scenes of peril, one in the North Sea, the other in a dungeon in St. Andrew's Castle, are especially chilling. McDermid, whose reputation and popularity are growing incrementally with each new book, is very like P. D. James in her masterful mixing of forensic science with brisk plots and in-depth characterization. ((Reviewed August 2003)) Copyright 2003 Booklist Reviews

Copyright 2003 Booklist Reviews
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Library Journal Reviews

Winter of 1978, St. Andrews University, Scotland. Four drunken young students on their way home from a party stumble upon local barmaid Rosie Duff, who has been raped, stabbed, and left to die. Unable to save her, the men become suspects in the case but are never formally charged. The stigma and shame of the experience follows these men into their adult lives. About 25 years later, two of the four men have been murdered. The remaining two, Alex Gilbery and the Rev. Tom Mackie, must identify their friends' killer before they become the next victims of this revenge murder spree. Having grown up on the east coast of Scotland, where this story takes place, McDermid (Killing the Shadows) ably depicts St. Andrews. The cast of characters is almost too large to allow the reader to get to know and care about them. Still, McDermid keeps the suspense rising until the end, even after the astute reader will have figured out the killer's identity. Recommended for public libraries.-Jane la Plante, Minot State Univ. Lib., ND Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information.

Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information.
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Publishers Weekly Reviews

This absorbing psychological novel of revenge shows British author McDermid (A Place of Execution) at the top of her form. In part one, set in 1978 in St. Andrews, Scotland, four drunken male students, friends since childhood, stumble over the raped and stabbed body of a dying woman, Rosie Duff, while staggering home through a snow storm. Though her violent brothers are convinced of their guilt, no one is charged with Rosie's murder. In part two, 25 years later, the police hope new forensic technologies will solve the crime, and suddenly someone is stalking the four men, whose lives have been haunted and their relationships changed by the murder. Two die, supposedly by accident, and the remaining pair, Alex Gilbey and Tom Mackie, must find out what happened before they're killed, too. James Lawson, an assistant chief constable who was a junior cop in 1978, wants to close the case and avenge the death of his admired superior, DI Barney Maclennan, who fell from a cliff during the initial inquiry. When Graham Macfadyen, who claims he's Rosie's illegitimate son and also seeking revenge, contacts Lawson, the investigation takes a startling turn. Only the careful reader will anticipate the stunning conclusion, which makes perfect sense. Outstanding pacing, character and plot development, plus evocative place descriptions, make this another winner. (Oct. 20) Forecast: The author has had an eager audience since A Place of Execution (2000) won a number of prestigious awards, including the Anthony and Macavity. Lacking the gruesome forensic detail of some of her other books, this latest should draw additional readers as well as viewers of the recent TV adaptation of her Gold Dagger-winning novel, The Mermaids Singing (1995). Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information.

Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information.
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