



The Gravedigger's Song
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3.7 • 3 Ratings
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- $9.99
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- $9.99
Publisher Description
When his song is over, so are you
Under a starless winter night in rural Cornwall, four killers dressed in bizarre folkloric garb brutally invade the home of the wealthy West family. They destroy the posh house and kill the terrified family.
All but one: traumatized seventeen-year-old Simon manages to escape, fleeing through snowy woods. Later, fears that he’s an active target of madmen or criminals lead the police to once more come knocking on Tom Killgannon’s door: Will he watch over Simon until a more secure place is found for the boy?
An ex–undercover cop now living in witness protection, Tom’s turned his back on his violent past. Living in seclusion in his coastal cottage alongside his adoptive daughter, Lila, he also has a romance blossoming with local tavern owner, Pearl Ellacott.
Tom’s reluctant to shelter Simon, but the boy comes to stay, and villains are soon circling the cottage like vultures. When there’s a break-in late one night, Tom must protect his own. The ensuing violence disrupts the household harmony: a rift opens up as Pearl fears a life with Tom will be forever plagued by violence.
Meanwhile, a local by-election in this economically depressed part of the country arouses dangerous nativist sentiments. Simon falls into the clutches of a fanatical political cult that see a way to brainwash him and use him for their own ends.
To save the boy, Tom must summon from within the violent man he once was, risking the new life he created to face down the most lethal of foes.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
British author Waites's overwrought third outing for ex-undercover cop Tom Killgannon (after 2019's The Sinner) finds Tom still living in witness protection in Cornwall. When his liaison officer asks Tom to provide a temporary home for 17-year-old Simon West, the only survivor of an attack on Simon's family by a gang of goons, Tom reluctantly agrees to let the teen stay at his cottage. Soon someone breaks into the cottage, and the violence escalates from there. The complicated plot unfolds through the perspectives of multiple characters, including Sullivan, a disaffected member of the gang, and Simon, who gets caught up in the racist politicking of Aiden Marx, a conservative activist, and Arthur King, a nativist candidate for MP representing the impoverished area of Falmouth where Simon's family was murdered. Waites's take on contemporary white nationalism engages, but its damaging effects are undercut by his combining serious social commentary with the bizarre for bizarre's sake. This macabre story searching for heart is unlikely to win the author new fans.