Dangerous Pursuits by Scottish crime novelist Quintin Jardine (
SYKM,
Wikipedia), both is and isn't the 1st book in his long-running Oz Blackstone mystery/thriller crime series, featuring the eponymous private inquiry agent, free courtesy of publisher Hachette's Headline imprint.
This is a truly excellent freebie, IMHO, and it's unfortunate that many of you won't be able to pick it up, but perhaps some of you may consider it worth a future purchase on sale anyway?
As far as the actual story goes, I couldn't vouch for quality (though the author seems to have been popular enough to have sold a few dozen novels in ongoing series).
It's actually most interesting to me as an e-book which takes good advantage of the possibilities of the format to include special bonuses which would be impractical for a print version, and even if you don't care for the genre, if you're an aspiring writer of any sort, I think you'd want to pick it up.
This includes both the entire original 1996 version which was published as
Blackstone's Pursuits under the name of "Matthew Reid", and the newly-written 2013 Author's Cut where according to the accompanying notes, he has decided to write an entirely new take on the original story, after noticing that his main character had quite a number of personality traits associated with the clinical description of sociopathy and pretending to have "discovered" the "real" manuscript that was censored for publication.
So you get this fascinating idea of the new novel as a "hidden history" of a now very-unreliable narrator and "what really happened", as well as the old one to compare it with.
I've only skimmed a bit so far, but for anyone interested in the creative process, this seems like a great way to get insight into how the various character and plot decisions you make can affect the resulting effect of the story⁑, not to mention you have pretty much a side-by-side comparison of a nearly 20-year evolution in a single author's writing skills on the technical level as well. I'd be all over that, deconstructing and analyzing it to observe and learn as much as I could, if I were you.
And he even tells you why he's done some of the specific things he's (re-)done!
There's only a handful of reasonably prominent similar works which have undergone this kind of alteration and are readily available for public viewing (i.e., Mary Shelley's
Frankenstein, which exists in the version she wrote as a teen, then revised as an adult, and the late Marion Zimmer Bradley's*
Sword of Aldones/
Sharra's Exile, another novel completely re-written from the teen-envisioned version) and IMHO, it's fascinating to see the similarities and the differences.
And you're getting this one for free! (Maybe. If you live in the right area.)
Currently free @
Amazon &
iTunes (both only available to Canadians, but they'll be very happy Canadians for as long as it lasts).

ETA: and now also
Kobo (for Canadians, of course).
ETA: Now a repeat freebie for Canada at all the stores above and @
Google Play, and also free for the UK this time as well @
B&N UK,
Amazon UK,
Kobo UK,
iTunes UK, and probably also Google Play UK (exists in a slightly different edition that the Canadian one, so I can't pull up a link for you, sorry).
And this has been the selected 3rd free ebook alert thread of the day. Enjoy!
Description
Fans and new readers alike can enjoy the first title in Quintin Jardine's Oz Blackstone series - originally BLACKSTONE'S PURSUITS - updated with new material, exclusive to ebook.
When private enquiry agent Oz Blackstone takes on the job of finding an insurance company's missing half million, he's hoping for a healthy finder's fee, not a life-changing experience.
But when he finds the corpse of the would-be embezzler with a knife in his back and no sign of the missing money, what had seemed like a routine job begins to look distinctly dodgy. Until the captivating Primavera 'Prim' Phillips arrives on the scene, wondering why she's been greeted not by her sister Dawn, but Dawn's dead boyfriend and a rather nervous-looking private eye.
For Oz, things are looking up. This is the kind of girl who's definitely worth pursuing. Especially if she knows where to get her hands on half a million pounds…
* Who, unfortunately, turned out to be a
much more terrible person in private than previously suspected, a failing depressingly common among persons whose work one has enjoyed, and should be acknowledged as part of who they were and part of their legacy as well, rather than absolved by the quality and influence of their work (or conversely, destroying said quality and influence whose content may be related, though ultimately independent of what else they've done which also has had its lasting effects and taints their memory).
⁑ Of course, the idea of working out variations on a theme has been a core part of the
Oulipo† literary/creative movement since Raymond Queneau's (
Wikipedia entry) excellent and recommended
Exercices de style (also
Wikipedia entry), which has had two absolutely marvellous illustrated editions‡ from Éditions Gallimard which showcase not only the literary, but also the incredible artistic potential of storytelling from a single concept.
For the graphic novel readers among you, artist Matt Madden (another
Wikipedia entry) has done an inventive comic book riff on Queneau, which I also happen to own in two languages, and has put part of it up online for your reading delight:
99 Ways To Tell A Story (with, you guessed it,
Wikipedia entry).
† Which happens to be my very favourite literary/creative movement ever. It's like the bastard lovechild of
Dadaism and
Arts & Crafts, and thus is made of many variations on the theme of sheer awesome.
‡ I own them both and can only give them the highest possible recommendation as creative art books in the truest sense. And not just because I'm a sucker for Bayeux Tapestry parodies.
The one done in the 70s has some nifty retro-typographical setting as well as a gallery of cultural/artistic parodies (i.e. the ancient Egyption version "chiseled" into stone, the heraldic coat of arms design, and the board game).
The one done in the 90s/00s is actually a flip book which splits the text/art into different sections above and below, so you can choose which set of illustrations to accompany the story.
Both are just brilliant and I in no way regret the $$ I spent to acquire them.