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Haunted by the past and his own limitations, Israeli Detective Avraham Avraham must stop a criminal ruthless enough to target children in this evocative and gripping tale of mystery and psychological suspense that is the follow-up to The Missing File, the acclaimed first novel in D. A. Mishani's literary crime series that was shortlisted for the CWA International Dagger Award.An explosive device is found in a suitcase near a daycare center in a quiet suburb of Tel Aviv. A few hours later, a threat is received: the suitcase was only the beginning.Inspector Avraham Avraham, back in Israel after a much-needed vacation, is assigned to the investigation. Tormented by the trauma and failure of his past case, Avraham is determined not to make the same mistakes - especially with innocent lives at stake. He may have a break when one of the suspects, a father of two, appears to have gone on the run. Is he the terrorist behind the threat? Is he trying to escape Avraham's intense investigation? Or perhaps he's fleeing a far more terrible crime that no one knows has been committed?No matter how much Avraham wants to atone for the past, redemption may not be possible - not when he's entangled in a case more deceptive and abominable than any he's ever faced.



About the Author

D. A. Mishani

Dror. A. Mishani (born in 1975) is an Israeli crime writer and literary scholar, specializing in the history of detective fiction. His crime series, featuring police inspector Avraham Avraham, was first published in Hebrew in 2011 and is translated to more than 15 languages. The first novel in the series, "The Missing File", was shortlisted in 2013 to the CWA International dagger award and the Grand Prix de Litterature policiere, and won the prestigious Martin Beck award (for best crime novel translated to Swedish) and the Grand Prix du meilleur polar de lecteurs des Points in France. The second novel in the series, "A Possibility of Violence", won the prestigious Bernstein prize for best Israeli novel in 2014. Dror. A. Mishani lives with his wife and two children in Tel Aviv and teaches in Tel Aviv University.



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