Welcome to my stop on the Book Tour, presented by Pump Up Your Book, for The Murder Road by Stephen Booth. Please leave a comment or question for Stephen to let him know you stopped by.
The
Murder Road
by Stephen Booth
by Stephen Booth
Cooper
& Fry Mysteries, Book 15
Publisher: Witness Impulse (HarperCollins)
Release
Date: September 8, 2015
Genre: Mystery/Suspense
Format: Hardcover, Paperback, eBook
Genre: Mystery/Suspense
Format: Hardcover, Paperback, eBook
Length: 400 Pages (907KB)
ISBN: 978-0062439246
ISBN: 978-0062439246
ASIN: B00XHRVXKE
For fans of Broadchurch, Louise Penny, and Peter
Robinson comes a spellbinding new novel from internationally bestselling author
Stephen Booth.
Welcome to the picturesque English village of
Shawhead, where there’s one road in and one road out. And on that road this
morning is an abandoned vehicle…with an ominous bloodstain inside.
It’s a mystery. It could be a murder. Where—and who—is
the driver? Whose blood has been discovered? Why are the people of Shawhead so
hostile toward Detective Ben Cooper, sent in to take charge of the
investigation?
As Cooper peels back layers of lies and exposes dark
secrets to the light, he draws ever closer to a killer hiding in plain sight.
Packed with atmosphere, suspense, and surprises, The Murder Road is
Stephen Booth’s most unforgettable novel yet.
Order
your copy of The Murder Road at:
Amazon Barnes & Noble Kobo iTunes Google Play
Amazon Barnes & Noble Kobo iTunes Google Play
A
newspaper and magazine journalist for over 25 years, Stephen Booth was born in
the English Pennine mill town of Burnley. He was brought up on the Lancashire
coast at Blackpool, where he attended Arnold School. He began his career in
journalism by editing his school magazine, and wrote his first novel at the age
of 12.
After
graduating from City of Birmingham Polytechnic (now Birmingham City
University), Stephen moved to Manchester to train as a teacher, but escaped
from the profession after a terrifying spell as a trainee teacher in a big city
comprehensive school.
Starting
work on his first newspaper in Wilmslow, Cheshire, in 1974, Stephen was a
specialist rugby union reporter, as well as working night shifts as a
sub-editor on the Daily Express and The Guardian. This was followed by periods
with local newspapers in Yorkshire, Nottinghamshire and Derbyshire. He was at
various times Production Editor of the Farming Guardian magazine, Regional
Secretary of the British Guild of Editors, and one of the UK’s first qualified
assessors for the NVQ in Production Journalism.
Freelance
work began with rugby reports for national newspapers and local radio stations.
Stephen has also had articles and photographs published in a wide range of
specialist magazines, from Scottish Memories to Countrylovers Magazine, from
Cat World to Canal and Riverboat, and one short story broadcast on BBC radio.
In 1999, his writing career changed direction when, in rapid succession, he was
shortlisted for the Dundee Book Prize and the Crime Writers’ Association Debut
Dagger competition for new writers, then won the £5,000 Lichfield Prize for his
unpublished novel The Only Dead Thing, and signed a two-book contract with
HarperCollins for a series of crime novels.
In
2000, Stephen’s first published novel, Black Dog, marked the arrival in print
of his best known creations – two young Derbyshire police detectives, DC Ben
Cooper and DS Diane Fry. Black Dog was the named by the London Evening Standard
as one of the six best crime novels of the year – the only book on their list
written by a British author. In the USA, it won the Barry Award for Best
British Crime Novel and was nominated for an Anthony Award for Best First
Mystery. The second Cooper & Fry novel, Dancing with the Virgins, was
shortlisted for the UK’s top crime writing award, the Gold Dagger, and went on
to win Stephen a Barry Award for the second year running.
In
2003, Detective Constable Ben Cooper was a finalist for the Sherlock Award for
the Best Detective created by a British author, thanks to his exploits in the
third book of the series, Blood on the Tongue. The publication of Blind to the
Bones that year resulted in Stephen winning the Crime Writers’ Association’s
‘Dagger in the Library’ Award, presented to the author whose books have given
readers most pleasure. The same book was nominated for the Theakston’s UK Crime
Novel of the Year award in 2005. Subsequent titles have been One Last Breath,
The Dead Place (both finalists for the UK Crime Novel of the Year in 2006 and
2007), Scared to Live, Dying to Sin, The Kill Call, Lost River, The Devil’s
Edge, Dead and Buried and Already Dead. The 14th Cooper & Fry novel, The
Corpse Bridge, was published in the UK in June 2014 and will be followed by The
Murder Road in 2015. A special Ben Cooper story, Claws, was released in 2007 to
launch the new ‘Crime Express’ imprint, and was re-issued in April 2011.
All
the books are set in England’s beautiful and atmospheric Peak District. At the
end of 2006, the Peak District National Park Authority featured locations from
the Cooper & Fry series in their new Peak Experience visitors’ guides,
recognising the interest in the area inspired by the books.
The
Cooper & Fry series is now published by Little, Brown in the UK and by the
Witness Impulse imprint of HarperCollins in the USA. In addition to publication
in the US, Canada, Australia and New Zealand, translation rights in the series
have so far been sold in fifteen languages – French, German, Dutch, Italian,
Swedish, Danish, Finnish, Norwegian, Spanish, Portuguese, Russian, Czech,
Romanian, Bulgarian and Japanese.
While
living on a smallholding in Yorkshire, Stephen began breeding pedigree dairy
goats as a hobby (and as an extreme contrast to working in busy news rooms!).
He later served on the British Goat Society’s governing body and judged at
shows all over Britain. He has been chairman of several clubs, including the
charity fund-raising Just Kidding Goat Society, and probably his most unusual
role was as a director of an artificial insemination company. Specialist
publications he’s been responsible for include a book on one of the country’s
oldest goat breeds, The Toggenburg. He is a former President of the Toggenburg
Breeders Society.
Stephen
left journalism in 2001 to write novels full time. He and his wife Lesley live
in a village in rural Nottinghamshire, England (home of Robin Hood and the
Pilgrim Fathers). They have three cats.
In
recent years, Stephen Booth has become a Library Champion in support of the
UK’s ‘Love Libraries’ campaign, and a Reading Champion to support the National
Year of Reading. He has also represented British literature at the Helsinki
Book Fair in Finland, filmed a documentary for 20th Century Fox on the French
detective Vidocq, taken part in online chats for World Book Day, and given
talks at many conferences, conventions, libraries, bookshops and festivals
around the world.
For
More Information
Visit
Stephen’s website.
Follow him on Twitter
September
1
Book
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Book
reviewed and Guest blogging at Bless Their
Hearts Mom
September
7
Book
featured at Mikky’s World of Books
September
8
Book
reviewed at Undercover Book Reviews
September
9
Interviewed
at Review From
Here
September
10
Book
featured at Literal
Exposure
September
11
Guest
blogging at Write
and Take Flight
September
14
Interviewed
at I’m Shelf-ish
September
15
Book
featured at Confessions of a Reader
September
16
Guest
blogging at Around
the World in Books
September
17
Interviewed
at Deal
Sharing Aunt
September
18
Guest
blogging at Authors and Readers Book Corner
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21
Guest
blogging at Queen of All She Reads
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22
Book
featured at Crystal’s Chaotic Confessions
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23
Guest
blogging at Lori’s
Reading Corner
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24
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featured at Voodoo
Princess
September
25
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featured at The
Dark Phantom
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28
Book
featured at The
Literary Nook
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29
Guest
blogging at Bent
Over Bookwords
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30
Guest
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October
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Interviewed
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Book
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2
Book
featured at Celticlady’s Review
Interviewed
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