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Gabrilis Kaloyeros is a bee-keeper on the beautiful Greek island of Arcadia The ruined Temple of Apollo has been in his care for decades and he has worked to protect it But when crooked developers take over the island and the value of the land soars he is persuaded through unscrupulous means to sign away his interest Hours later he meets a violent lonely deathWhen detective Hermes Diaktoros finds his friends battered body by a dusty roadside the police quickly name him the prime suspect But with rapacious developers threatening Arcadias most ancient sites many stand to gain from Gabriliss death Hermes resolves to avenge his old friend and find the true culprit but his methods are as ever unorthodoxAs in The Messenger of Athens Anne Zouroudi tells a spellbinding mystery set in an enchanted place where the myths of the ancient past intersect with the realities of contemporary life with deadly results.



About the Author

Anne Zouroudi

Born in rural Lincolnshire in 1959, Anne moved to South Yorkshire at the age of two. Following her education at Sheffield High School for Girls, she went into the IT industry, a career which took her to both New York's Wall Street and Denver, Colorado. In America she began to take seriously her ambition to write fiction, and bought a typewriter for her first short stories. On returning to the UK, she booked a summer holiday with her sister. The location they chose was a tiny island in southern Greece. ??We arrived at night; there was nothing to see,' she recalls. ??But the next morning, I opened the shutters of our rented house, and bam! Love at first sight. The brilliant blue sea, the scent of herbs on the breeze, the timelessness of the place?¦ It was the first moment of a love affair which has lasted twenty years. 'Anne spent a number of years living in the islands; she married a Greek, and her son was born there. Returning again to the UK, she was still writing, but the short stories had grown into novels. Anne??I wrote three, and whilst I was getting interest in my writing, those novels didn't find publishers, though a northern-based thriller came close,' she says. ??Then I decided to write a novel set in Greece, based on a character who'd come to my mind whilst I was living there. He became Hermes Diaktoros. I sent the manuscript to an agent, and went off to spend some time in Greece. When I returned, I got the call I'd been waiting for. I'd written the right book at last. '



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