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Lockdown: An incredibly prescient crime thriller from the author of The Lewis Trilogy
Peter May
€ 11.99
€ 6.02
FREE Delivery in Ireland
Description for Lockdown: An incredibly prescient crime thriller from the author of The Lewis Trilogy
Paperback.
'They said that twenty-five percent of the population would catch the flu. Between seventy and eighty percent of them would die. He had been directly exposed to it, and the odds weren't good.'
A CITY IN QUARANTINE
London, the epicenter of a global pandemic, is a city in lockdown. Violence and civil disorder simmer. Martial law has been imposed. No-one is safe from the deadly virus that has already claimed thousands of victims. Health and emergency services are overwhelmed.
A MURDERED CHILD
At a building site for a temporary hospital, construction workers find ... Read more
Product Details
Format
Paperback
Publication date
2020
Publisher
Quercus Publishing
Condition
New
Number of Pages
416
Place of Publication
London, United Kingdom
ISBN
9781529411690
SKU
9781529411690
Shipping Time
Usually ships in 2 to 4 working days
Ref
99-3
About Peter May
Peter May was born and raised in Scotland. He was an award-winning journalist at the age of twenty-one and a published novelist at twenty-six. When his first book was adapted as a major drama series for the BBC, he quit journalism and during the high-octane fifteen years that followed, became one of Scotland's most successful television dramatists. He created three ... Read more
Reviews for Lockdown: An incredibly prescient crime thriller from the author of The Lewis Trilogy
May ... is a classy crime writer and Lockdown is both prophetic and unnerving
Guardian
His virus is far deadlier than Covid-19, but his portrait of a city under siege and his explanations for the spread of the disease . . . are scarily prescient
Observer
Lockdown feels inescapably relevant, its pages teeming with existential dread ... Read more
Guardian
His virus is far deadlier than Covid-19, but his portrait of a city under siege and his explanations for the spread of the disease . . . are scarily prescient
Observer
Lockdown feels inescapably relevant, its pages teeming with existential dread ... Read more