Why a Booktrail?
2000s: Everyone has a hobby. Some people collect death.
2000s: Everyone has a hobby. Some people collect death.
The first commuter train of the morning slowly rumbles away from platform seven of Queen St station. Everyone on board is sleepy, avoiding eye contact, reluctant to admit the day has begun. And then, as the train emerges from a tunnel, the screaming starts. Hanging from the bridge ahead of them is a body. Placed neatly on the ground below him are the victim’s clothes. Why?
Detective Narey is assigned the case and then just as quickly taken off it again. Winter, now a journalist, must pursue the case for her. The line of questioning centres around the victim’s clothes – why leave them in full view? And what did the killer not leave, and where might it appear again?
Everyone has a hobby. Some people collect death. To find this evil, Narey must go on to the dark web, and into immense danger …
Imagine collecting macabre souvenirs from crime scenes? A brick from 25 Cromwell Street for example or something from Rillington Place. There are several addresses up and down the UK which are infamous for the most macabre of collection hunters and this is a dark area of exploration in this novel. Many houses and buildings which are the scenes of horrific crimes are knocked down to prevent people from taking souvenirs but inside the mind of someone who would thrive on such a collection is a dark dark world indeed.
The darkness of the dark web is a perfect place to hide if you’re in the market for some murderabilia and this delves deep into a hidden world that is actually in plain sight
Glasgow’s streets become the pathways to darker deeds and as for Queen Street Station…….the chills start as soon as you arrive in Robertson’s Glasgow
Author/Guide Craig Robertson Destination: Glasgow Departure Time: 2000s
Back to Results