An edition of Let the dead lie (2010)

Let the dead lie

a novel

1st Washington Square Press pbk. ed.
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Last edited by MARC Bot
January 2, 2023 | History
An edition of Let the dead lie (2010)

Let the dead lie

a novel

1st Washington Square Press pbk. ed.
  • 0 Ratings
  • 1 Want to read
  • 0 Currently reading
  • 0 Have read

A stunning novel about murder, power, and a dangerous South African underworld. Cooper works undercover surveillance on the seedy Durban docks, but when a young boy is brutally murdered he must elude the police to conduct his own investigation. He discovers an international tussle for the political soul of South Africa.

Publish Date
Language
English
Pages
382

Buy this book

Previews available in: English

Edition Availability
Cover of: Let the Dead Lie
Let the Dead Lie: An Emmanuel Cooper Mystery
2017, Brio Books
in English
Cover of: Let the Dead Lie
Let the Dead Lie
2013, Pan Macmillan
in English
Cover of: Let the Dead Lie
Let the Dead Lie
Mar 01, 2011, Picador USA
paperback
Cover of: Let the Dead Lie
Let the Dead Lie
May 20, 2010, Recorded Books, Inc. and Blackstone Publishing
audio cd
Cover of: Let the Dead Lie
Let the Dead Lie
2010, Recorded Books
audio cd
Cover of: Let the dead lie
Let the dead lie: a novel
2010, Washington Square Press
in English - 1st Washington Square Press pbk. ed.
Cover of: Let the dead lie
Let the dead lie
May 24, 2010, Pan Macmillan South Africa
paperback

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Book Details


Edition Notes

Includes a reading group discussion guide.

Published in
New York
Series
WSP readers club, WSP readers club

Classifications

Dewey Decimal Class
823/.92
Library of Congress
PR9619.4.N86 L48 2010, PS

The Physical Object

Pagination
vi, 382 p. ;
Number of pages
382

ID Numbers

Open Library
OL24480237M
Internet Archive
letdeadlienovel00nunn
ISBN 10
1416586229
ISBN 13
9781416586227
LCCN
2010279621
OCLC/WorldCat
424555357

Work Description

This suspenseful novel from award-winning author Malla Nunn is taut and tightly paced. Set in 1953 in South Africa, a country that surrounds Nunn’s country of birth, Swaziland, the detective novel masterfully blends all elements that are required in such a text. Whether it is read as a sequel to Nunn’s impressive debut novel, A Beautiful Place to Die, or by itself matters little, but that it is most definitely worth reading by anyone interested in the detective genre is a cert.

The action in Let the Dead Lie centers around the deductive work of a former detective sergeant, Emmanuel Cooper. Emmanuel was earlier forced to buy his release from the police force on pain of otherwise being dishonorably discharged for an action that, under a more just system than the reigning apartheid regime, would not have been necessary. Within 48 hours, Emmanuel has to solve a crime without the backup of the resources that would have been available to him as a matter of course if he had been part of the conventional police force. Not only does Emmanuel have to cope with the thugs and criminals that formed part of the underworld of the time, but he also finds himself up against those who would, prior to his disgrace, have been his colleagues. With the threat of a jail sentence hanging over his head if he does not solve the crime, involving the murder of a young white boy, which rapidly escalates into the murder of three victims, in time, Emmanuel has no time to waste. Each page is more gripping than the first, as Emmanuel’s deadline looms ever closer.

In addition to those striving to outwit or outrun him, Emmanuel also has his own inner demons with which to contend. As a demobbed soldier who has survived the burned out battlefields of Western Europe, Emmanuel is constantly besieged by ever-present imaginary figures, such as a brutal and callous Scottish sergeant major, who appear to him in the form of pounding migraines, from whom he can only escape by resorting to taking whatever drugs are at hand.

The description of the low-life types that frequent the Durban docklands are fascinating, as are the range of prostitutes that tread these pages. The social inequalities of the time, which were entrenched in the National Party’s legislative approach to the governance of multiracial South Africa, are revealed in full. The use of such a background is an effective means of keeping alive the memory of the horrendous deeds that were perpetrated by the apartheid state. However, at no stage does Nunn dictate what the response of the reader should be to such inequity and violation of basic human rights. Her primary intent is to tell a first rate story, peopled by three dimensional, credible characters, and this she achieves to the full.

Let the Dead Lie is a well rounded, believable novel that should gain a wide audience, as well as being a work in which contemporary historians and those affected by post-traumatic stress disorder should take an interest.

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History

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January 2, 2023 Edited by MARC Bot import existing book
December 4, 2022 Edited by ImportBot import existing book
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September 15, 2021 Edited by ImportBot import existing book
November 30, 2010 Created by ImportBot Imported from Library of Congress MARC record.