The sixth Penns River book, Leaving the
Scene, drops May 17 from Down & Out Books. Changes are afoot.
·
Stush Napierkowski has retired so
·
There’s a new chief.
·
There’s also a new deputy chief, promoted from
within;
·
A new patrol officer begins work;
·
Series protagonist Doc Dougherty has an
unwelcome change of status.
All the above and more revolve around a hit-and-run
fatality. Two high school boys running their dog discover a badly mutilated body
at an abandoned service station. She has no identification, so the police can’t
even start work on the case until they have a name.
The daily crime and general weirdness that affects a town
the size of Penns River doesn’t stop because the cops have a stone whodunit
dropped in their laps. Routine calls for domestic disturbances, petty theft,
grand theft, armed robbery, court dates, and a man covered in cooking oil wearing
nothing but a sock. The new chief, a retired Boston police captain, finds
himself up to his ears the day he starts work in what was supposed to be a less
stressful position.
Six books into a series now with at least one more on the
way (the work in progress is in final revisions, at least until the editor gets
hold of it), and another half-formed in my head, the risk of staleness is
always on my mind. Finding different types of stories and new ways to tell them
now occupy a lot of my creative energy. Since Leaving the Scene focuses
on conflicting demands for the cops’ time, the book is not laid out in
chapters; it’s divided by days. Each section begins with the day and date; the
time of day each scene begins is noted at the outset. The plan was to keep the
passage of time in the reader’s mind as a way to show the frustration the cops
feel as things keep dragging on with no resolution to the homicide.
Here’s what others have to say about Leaving the Scene:
A small town, a killing, and a cast of characters tough
enough to make Elmore Leonard grin. Dana King’s Leaving the Scene is a
slow burn that will leave you wanting more. A great read!
— Bruce Robert Coffin, bestselling author of the Detective
Byron mysteries
Great read- ensemble cast, police procedural in a tough,
blue-collar-town, with good reminders of classic Ed McBain. Gritty and
authentic detail, with realistic, interesting characters and crimes.
-- Dale T. Phillips, author of A Memory of Grief and A
Darkened Room
Dana King’s Leaving the Scene delivers the goods—a
procedural packed with smart dialogue, sharp plotting, and a vivid humanity
that brings to mind the best of McBain, Wambaugh, and Connelly.
--James D. F. Hannah, Shamus Award-winning author of the
Henry Malone series.
With interweaving plots and quickfire dialogue, the
relentless pace of Leaving the Scene is highly addictive.
--Caro Ramsay, Dagger shortlisted author of the Anderson and
Costello mysteries
Next week I’ll post a teaser from the book.
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