Author: | Ian Church | ISBN: | 9781843960881 |
Publisher: | Fulmar Publishing | Publication: | November 25, 2013 |
Imprint: | Language: | English |
Author: | Ian Church |
ISBN: | 9781843960881 |
Publisher: | Fulmar Publishing |
Publication: | November 25, 2013 |
Imprint: | |
Language: | English |
Nick Paice is a newsman who has seen and had better times. Covering conflicts and disasters around the world brought its success, but at a heavy personal price. Being one of the best in the business was achieved by a ruthless and often callous pursuit of the story that left ruined reputations and broken lives, not to mention a wrecked marriage and estranged children, in its alcoholic wake.
But disillusionment has set in. The world of news is changing, and, for Paice, not for the better. Can he change with it and does he want to? With his enthusiasm on the wane, the stories have stopped coming. But the job is his life, and his life is the job. He needs a big break to get them both back on track. When it comes it is in the form of a mysterious figure with a bloodstained past and a tale that could put Paice back on top. The passion for news that made him the best is rekindled and the old fervour returns.
But Paice is bad at making friends and good at making enemies. A multi-millionaire fraudster, former Irish terrorists, and a genocidal killer from an African conflict count themselves among the latter. Only when the body count rises and the bullets fly does Paice realise that he may be pursuing a headline to die for.
This is a story of financial fraud, old enemies out to settle scores, a covert military operation that went wrong, and powerful people determined to stop Paice revealing the truth at any cost. But will Paice find himself back on the front page – or in the morgue?
A former reporter with various national news organisations, Ian Church spent most of his working life reporting the Westminster Parliament. He moved on from the world of news to work for Hansard, the Official Report of the debates in the House of Commons. He retired in 2002, by which time he had been the Editor for 13 years. The Remains of the Living is his second book but his first novel.
Nick Paice is a newsman who has seen and had better times. Covering conflicts and disasters around the world brought its success, but at a heavy personal price. Being one of the best in the business was achieved by a ruthless and often callous pursuit of the story that left ruined reputations and broken lives, not to mention a wrecked marriage and estranged children, in its alcoholic wake.
But disillusionment has set in. The world of news is changing, and, for Paice, not for the better. Can he change with it and does he want to? With his enthusiasm on the wane, the stories have stopped coming. But the job is his life, and his life is the job. He needs a big break to get them both back on track. When it comes it is in the form of a mysterious figure with a bloodstained past and a tale that could put Paice back on top. The passion for news that made him the best is rekindled and the old fervour returns.
But Paice is bad at making friends and good at making enemies. A multi-millionaire fraudster, former Irish terrorists, and a genocidal killer from an African conflict count themselves among the latter. Only when the body count rises and the bullets fly does Paice realise that he may be pursuing a headline to die for.
This is a story of financial fraud, old enemies out to settle scores, a covert military operation that went wrong, and powerful people determined to stop Paice revealing the truth at any cost. But will Paice find himself back on the front page – or in the morgue?
A former reporter with various national news organisations, Ian Church spent most of his working life reporting the Westminster Parliament. He moved on from the world of news to work for Hansard, the Official Report of the debates in the House of Commons. He retired in 2002, by which time he had been the Editor for 13 years. The Remains of the Living is his second book but his first novel.