The Ring of Death

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Average Rating
Publisher
Severn House
Publication Date
2011
Language
English

Description

The second in a new series featuring DCI Monika Paniatowski - Nothing could have prepared DCI Monika Paniatowski for this. It’s not that the man’s throat has been cut, or that he is naked, that shocks her – it’s the way his corpse has been so carefully posed. Is the killer sending a message? If so, to who? Saddled with a colleague she doesn’t trust, and watched by an old enemy, Monika realises that whatever the murderer’s message is, he will not stop killing until she understands.

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ISBN
9781780100425

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Published Reviews

Booklist Review

After Spencer retired her delightfully irascible DCI Charlie Woodend, most fans sensed it was the end of an era. But in Monika Paniatowski, Woodend's replacement as DCI, Spencer has created a new protagonist who might even best Woodend. Paniatowski has overcome a horrific childhood to reach her elevated position and is focused on filling Woodend's very big shoes. Unfortunately, it's 1970s Britain, and most of Monika's male colleagues believe a woman's place is at home. But her colleagues' resentment is the least of her worries when a man's mutilated body is found near Whitebridge, posed on hands and knees and stark naked. Clearly, the killer was trying to deliver a message, but Paniatowski and her team can't begin to guess what it might be. Then two more bodies are found, also naked and posed, and the stakes are raised still further. As usual, Spencer produces a hugely entertaining police procedural, but it's her keen perception of human nature and her ability to draw flawed but sympathetic characters that make this extension of the Woodend series such a standout.--Melton, Emily Copyright 2010 Booklist

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

Fans of The Dead Hand of History (2009) will welcome Spencer's second mystery featuring Det. Chief Insp. Monika Paniatowski set in 1970s Lancashire. Early one morning in the woods outside Whitebridge, a dog breeder discovers the naked, mutilated body of a man in his mid-30s. Particularly shocking is that the dead man is on his hands and knees, rigor mortis keeping him in position. Monika and her team get to work on the case and soon learn the victim is Andrew Adair-a recently discharged army officer who was one of the paras involved in the notorious 1972 Bloody Sunday killings in Northern Ireland. Before the team makes much headway, a similar murder occurs, and Monika realizes she must figure out what message the killer is trying to send with the posed corpses-and fast-before the violence escalates. A witty protagonist and a likable supporting cast redeem what is otherwise a formulaic police procedural. (June) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

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

A man is tortured, murdered, and left in a gruesome pose in the woods outside Whitebridge, England, and DCI Monika Paniatowski's team catches the case. Adding to Paniatowski's difficulties as a female Chief Inspector is the assignment of a new sergeant with issues. The possibility that the team may be up against the IRA and the return of her personal nemesis, Mr. Forsyth (Home Office or MI5), causes Paniatowski to question her decisions. VERDICT This second entry in Spencer's spinoff series from her Charlie Woodend mysteries (after The Dead Hand of History) grabs the reader on the first page and never lets go until the shocker of an ending. Like Lynda La Plante's DCI Jane Tennison in the "Prime Suspect" series, Paniatowski must deal with the negative climate found in a male-dominated police establishment, Heartbreaking and heart-wrenching, this is Spencer at her best. [See Prepub Mystery, LJ 1/10.] (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

Beset by spies both official and unofficial, DCI Monika Paniatowski (The Dead Hand of History, 2009, etc.) investigates a series of murders as shocking as they are deliberate.Whoever killed Andy Adair went to great lengths to set the stage, first slitting his throat, then draping his corpse over a crate, and finally posing the unclothed body, now stiff with rigor mortis, on hands and knees in the woods to be found by habitual dog-walker Harold Toynbee. Why the killer went to such trouble is up to Monika to find out, with only the help of DI Colin Beresford and still-wet-behind-the-ears DC Jack Crane. So Chief Constable Baxter details DS Paul Cousins, fresh off psychiatric leave, to her team. DS Walker, her previous bagman, has been promoted, although his rise in rank does nothing to stop his determination to undermine Monika. So he secretly teams with Mike Traynor of the Lancashire Evening Chronicle to keep tabs on Monika's progress in hope of tripping her up. But the two amateur spies have nothing on sinister, silver-haired Mr. Forsyth, who comes all the way from London to tell Monika to watch her step. The entry of the secret service into her case rattles Monika but also motivates her. As she redoubles her efforts, so does the killer, littering the Lancashire landscape with naked corpses and sending a message only the new DCI can decode. Paniatowski continues to prove herself a worthy successor to Charlie Woodend as Spencer delivers another first-rate whodunit.]] Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

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

After Spencer retired her delightfully irascible DCI Charlie Woodend, most fans sensed it was the end of an era. But in Monika Paniatowski, Woodend's replacement as DCI, Spencer has created a new protagonist who might even best Woodend. Paniatowski has overcome a horrific childhood to reach her elevated position and is focused on filling Woodend's very big shoes. Unfortunately, it's 1970s Britain, and most of Monika's male colleagues believe a woman's place is at home. But her colleagues' resentment is the least of her worries when a man's mutilated body is found near Whitebridge, posed on hands and knees and stark naked. Clearly, the killer was trying to deliver a message, but Paniatowski and her team can't begin to guess what it might be. Then two more bodies are found, also naked and posed, and the stakes are raised still further. As usual, Spencer produces a hugely entertaining police procedural, but it's her keen perception of human nature and her ability to draw flawed but sympathetic characters that make this extension of the Woodend series such a standout. Copyright 2010 Booklist Reviews.

Copyright 2010 Booklist Reviews.
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Library Journal Reviews

In this second in Spencer's offshoot of her Charlie Woodend series, DCI Monika Paniatowski may be up against a serial killer gruesomely posing corpses to send her a message. Paniatowski's first leading role, The Dead Hand of History, got a star from LJ. Copyright 2010 Reed Business Information.

Copyright 2010 Reed Business Information.
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Library Journal Reviews

A man is tortured, murdered, and left in a gruesome pose in the woods outside Whitebridge, England, and DCI Monika Paniatowski's team catches the case. Adding to Paniatowski's difficulties as a female Chief Inspector is the assignment of a new sergeant with issues. The possibility that the team may be up against the IRA and the return of her personal nemesis, Mr. Forsyth (Home Office or MI5), causes Paniatowski to question her decisions. VERDICT This second entry in Spencer's spinoff series from her Charlie Woodend mysteries (after The Dead Hand of History) grabs the reader on the first page and never lets go until the shocker of an ending. Like Lynda La Plante's DCI Jane Tennison in the "Prime Suspect" series, Paniatowski must deal with the negative climate found in a male-dominated police establishment, Heartbreaking and heart-wrenching, this is Spencer at her best. [See Prepub Mystery, LJ 1/10.]

[Page 70]. Copyright 2010 Reed Business Information.

Copyright 2010 Reed Business Information.
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Publishers Weekly Reviews

Fans of The Dead Hand of History (2009) will welcome Spencer's second mystery featuring Det. Chief Insp. Monika Paniatowski set in 1970s Lancashire. Early one morning in the woods outside Whitebridge, a dog breeder discovers the naked, mutilated body of a man in his mid-30s. Particularly shocking is that the dead man is on his hands and knees, rigor mortis keeping him in position. Monika and her team get to work on the case and soon learn the victim is Andrew Adair—a recently discharged army officer who was one of the paras involved in the notorious 1972 Bloody Sunday killings in Northern Ireland. Before the team makes much headway, a similar murder occurs, and Monika realizes she must figure out what message the killer is trying to send with the posed corpses—and fast—before the violence escalates. A witty protagonist and a likable supporting cast redeem what is otherwise a formulaic police procedural. (June)

[Page 93]. Copyright 2010 Reed Business Information.

Copyright 2010 Reed Business Information.
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