Looking-glass Justice
Published August 2001 by Severn House at £17.99
ISBN: 0727856138
Having turned his back on a life of crime, Dick Frayne married Portia for her money. He discovers, when it's too late, that she married him for even less romantic reasons. This is a cautionary tale against avarice and greed
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Tom Clancy's Net Force: Night Moves
Published August 2001 by Severn House at £18.99
ISBN: 0727857355
When a top-secret cargo train carrying materials for a nuclear weapons programme is destroyed, it's the first incident in which information is stolen and deciphered. If Net-Force don't track the perpetrator down, it could re-draw the map of the world.
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In Suspense
Published August 2001 by Severn House at £17.99
ISBN: 0727857460
Sarah Jordan, a PhD researcher at a New York University, used to fear spiders but has finally conquered her childhood phobia and is captivated by their ritual mating and death. As her grip on reality relaxes, she begins to feel thrillingly powerful and is gripped by a terrifying metamorphosis.
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Complicity
Published July 2001 by Severn House at £17.99
ISBN: 0727856073
She had become victim to the oldest feminine weakness in the book . . .
Up till now Stella's memories have been clouded by grief: for ten years she has mourned the death of her husband. And yet she is so young, so beautiful, so full of curiosity . . Which is why she can't resist the enigmatic figure who appears one night, claiming to be her lost husband.
Jennie Melville is an acclaimed crime writer, the author of the bestselling Charmian
Daniels crime series. She has also written several superb romantic suspense novels.
Resurrection Row
Published September 2001 by Severn House at £17.99
ISBN: 0727857908
In this long-awaited early title from the ever-popular series, previously unavailable
in paperback, the Pitts are faced with a bizarre and gruesome challenge.
It was the most incredible thing: a corpse driving an empty hansom cab through the
foggy streets of a London evening. And it wasn't just any corpse, but the body of a
peer of the realm. This was sheer lunacy. Who on earth would want to unearth a
decently buried old chap like Lord Augustus Fitzroy-Hammond?
The doctor insisted that his death had been natural. But there was nothing natural
about this as far as the police were concerned. Inspector Pitt was determined to reveal
the truth, but even he was unprepared for the horrors of greed and exploitation that lay
in store.
'Perry has a wonderful feel for period and remains utterly convincing.' Guardian
Anne Perry lived abroad for many years before settling in the Scottish Highlands,
where she is a full-time writer.