Blood & Ink
by
Brett Adams
Publisher: Fremantle Press
Publication date: 2nd October 2022
Genre: Crime Fiction
Pages: 384
RRP: $32.99AU (Paperback)
Source: Courtesy of the publisher
My review of Blood & Ink
Blood & Ink was a literary delight!
Protagonist Jack Griffen is so well portrayed as the academic; mild mannered and a little muddleheaded, he is always relating everything back to literature.
Jack, feeling down on his luck since his wife and daughter left him to live in the US, throws everything into his job as Professor of Literature at UWA. He enjoys mentoring international student Hieronymus Beck, who is writing a crime novel. Jack sees Hieronymus as his protege.
When Hiero leaves behind his manuscript outline for Jack to read over he soon realises that Hiero is acting out the murders in real life. Knowing the police would never believe him he races across the globe to try and prevent the next murder. Each pending murder is coded as a puzzle that Jack must first decipher. What ensues is a fast paced, adrenaline fuelled cat-and-mouse game as Jack is always one step behind Hiero at every turn.
Once the police become involved Jack becomes the prime suspect and whilst trying to outwit the murderer he must also outmanoeuver the police.
Brett Adams has given his readers a sharply plotted and gripping crime thriller with many literary tie-ins throughout.
A writer who would know more than me about the makeup of a successful novel will recognise
the clever addition of these structural characteristics.
I loved the addition of exFBI, now Scotland Yard criminal profiler, DCI Marten Lacroix, tough and witty. This woman needs her own series!
Blood & Ink is an adrenaline fuelled read. It reads like a hard-boiled detective story, only with a literature professor as the lead character.
I can seriously see this on the big screen.
My rating 4 / 5 ⭐⭐⭐⭐
About the author
Brett Adams was raised in country Western Australia and lives in Perth. He has a PhD in Computer Science that taught him to love puzzles, and a family who taught him to love stories (or vice versa). He writes fiction across a range of genres, and has been known to plant an easter egg or two.