8 books from the 'Harry Hole' series by Jo Nesbo from Vintage Digital (£2.49 each) is the Amazon UK
Kindle Deal of the Day (September 30) *Wait for price to reflect discount before 1-clicking
Quote:
Product Description
Today only, get 8 books from the 'Harry Hole' series by Jo Nesbo for just £2.49 each.
The Bat: The First Harry Hole Case
The Redbreast: A Harry Hole thriller (Oslo Sequence 1)
Nemesis: A Harry Hole thriller (Oslo Sequence 2)
The Devil's Star: A Harry Hole thriller (Oslo Sequence 3)
The Redeemer: A Harry Hole thriller (Oslo Sequence 4)
The Snowman: A Harry Hole thriller (Oslo Sequence 5)
The Leopard: A Harry Hole thriller (Oslo Sequence 6)
Phantom: A Harry Hole thriller (Oslo Sequence 7)
|
A New York Winter's Tale by Mark Helprin from Picador (£0.99) is the Amazon UK
Kindle Deal of the Day (September 30) *Wait for price to reflect discount before 1-clicking
Quote:
Product Description
Now a major motion picture
One night in New York, a city under siege by snow, Peter Lake attempts to rob a fortress-like mansion on the Upper West Side. Though he thinks it is empty, the daughter of the house is home . . .
Thus begins the affair between this Irish burglar and Beverly Penn, a young girl dying of consumption. It is a love so powerful that Peter will be driven to stop time and bring back the dead; A New York Winter’s Tale is the story of that extraordinary journey.
|
Dying for Justice (A Detective Jackson Mystery) by L.J. Sellers from Thomas & Mercer (£0.99) is the Amazon UK
Kindle Deal of the Day (September 30) *Wait for price to reflect discount before 1-clicking
Add narration for a reduced price of £3.49 after you buy the Kindle book.
Quote:
Product Description
Ten years ago, Hector Vargas confessed to the cold-blooded murder of Detective Wade Jackson’s parents. Now, facing his own death, Vargas has reached out from prison to declare his innocence. Armed with the shocking new truth that dirty cops railroaded Vargas, Jackson must revisit the painful past to get justice for his parents—and jail the ruthless killer.
Meanwhile, Gina Stahl awakens from a two-year coma with a chilling message on her lips: He tried to kill me. Now Detective Lara Evans must probe the young woman’s desperate claim that her near death was not failed suicide, but attempted murder.
As their investigations intersect, Jackson tangles with his estranged brother, hunts a loan shark turned philanthropist, and confronts his parents’ long-buried secrets, while Evans contends with a relentless reporter, shadows a fellow cop with a dangerous reputation, and struggles with her feelings for Jackson. But the more dark revelations they make, the deadlier the resistance they face from a killer terrified of losing everything…and willing to stop at nothing.
|
Riddle of the Labyrinth: The Quest to Crack an Ancient Code and the Uncovering of a Lost Civilisation by Margalit Fox from Profile Books (£0.99) is the Amazon UK
Kindle Daily Deal (September 30) *Wait for price to reflect discount before 1-clicking
Quote:
Product Description
For the first time, the full story of the race to decipher the world's greatest puzzle.
The decoding of Linear B is one of the world's greatest stories: from the discovery of a cache of ancient tablets recording a lost prehistoric language to the dramatic solution of the riddle nearly seventy years later, it exerts a mesmerising pull on the imagination.
But this captivating story is missing a crucial piece. Two men have dominated Linear B in popular history: Arthur Evans, the intrepid Victorian archaeologist who unearthed Linear B at Knossos and Michael Ventris, the dashing young amateur who produced a solution. But there was a third figure: Alice Kober, without whose painstaking work, recorded on pieces of paper clipped from hymn-sheets and magazines and stored in cigarette boxes in her Brooklyn loft, Linear B might still remain a mystery.
Drawing on Kober's own papers - only made available recently - Margalit Fox provides the final piece of the enigma, and along the way reveals how you decipher a language when you know neither its grammar nor its alphabet as well as the stories behind other ancient languages, like the dancing-man Rongorongo of Easter Island.
|