About The Dead Don’t Talk
The ghosts of darkness are not just in your mind.
DI Jack Husker has been humiliated. Shamed in court, his reputation has been dragged through the gutter. Accused of pursuing a personal vendetta against a notorious crime boss, Jack is removed from front-line duties. With his career over, he is assigned to a desk job searching for missing persons.
A simple case soon focuses eyes back on Jack. A series of witnesses disappear from the city’s streets. Each is linked to him, leaving questions being asked of the detective. It puts Jack back under the microscope and pushes his DCI to the limit.
Set in the beautiful city of York, this is DI Jack Husker’s second outing in a case that was never supposed to be a murder.
In the misty darkness, nobody heard the screams as two more souls were gathered from the city’s streets.
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Author Bio:
Alex Robert has lived most of his life in and around the outskirts of York. He is a family man, with a long-held passion for writing, who grew up unsure of what career path to follow. While writing has always been his first love, it disappeared into the fog that is real life, leaving him to forge a moderately successful career in an office. Having spent twenty years finding reasons not to put pen to paper, he finally took the plunge and has never regretted the decision.
His first novel Death Sketches was a story that has been bubbling away in his head for too many years. Alex openly admits it came as a relief to finally see the characters brought to life.
The characters and locations in his books are inspired by people and places he has met and seen, supplemented with an imaginative twist. For now, his books will continue to be based around a city he loves though Alex has not ruled out spreading his wings further afield, depending on where his characters choose to take him.
There will be plenty more adventures for some of the characters in the book while others will meet an unfortunate end. That allows the books to stay fresh and new characters to be introduced even if some of the demises might be sudden. With tongue in cheek, Alex offers the view that it prevents undue suffering on their part. In truth, it is designed to keep readers enthralled.