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Gerald Wixey
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Media
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Book
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Publisher | Matador | ||
ISBN | 9781848766969 | ||
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Reviewer
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Vicky
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Ecstasy, revenge and a murderer on the loose in a small town all drive a young man s obsession to find out the truth, whatever the cost... Stuart's feckless life suddenly comes into sharp focus as he begins a sweeping, illicit love affair with Kathy. The lovers are reckless, indiscreet and hopelessly in love. But all the time Stuart is haunted by events from twelve years earlier. As a young boy, he had watched a dark love affair blossom between his uncle and Shirley, Kathy's mother-in-law. The scandalous affair somehow becomes the trigger for two apparently unconnected incidents. First Stuart hears the screams of a mechanic as a five ton bus comes crashing down on his head in what the coroner described as a dreadful accident. Within a couple of weeks, Stuart's best friend disappeared and from that moment on, he always believed that there was a connection between his friend vanishing and the mechanic's death. Twelve years later and a chance encounter with the dead mechanic's wife, confirms his long held suspicions of a connection between these incidents. Just to complicate things further, Kathy is the sister of his missing friend and the wife of a man he's hated for most of his life. Unbeknown to Stuart, the cuckolded man not only knows a lot about the events from twelve years ago, he's well aware of his wife's amour as well. When the body of his friend is found, Stuart suddenly realises that their affair is about to end like a violent Greek tragedy. Salt of Their Blood is an epic story by a new author about a tempestuous, dark and very modern love affair.
Review
I found 'Salt of their Blood' and absolutely fascinating read, set in the 60s and 70s in and around Oxfordshire. I liked the way that the story bounced back and forth between the two decades, and in a way it reminded me of a very stylistic type of English pulp fiction. It is a dark story of love found, lost and found again,a bit like a Greek tragedy, but also it is about crime and who did the deed. There are clues but I still found it a surprise by the end of the book as to who did actually do the murder.
As a debut novel I feel that Gerald Wixey has done a brilliant job and highly recommend this book.

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