| Dennis Richard Murphy
was a successful film and television writer, director, producer
and teacher whose documentary series appeared in 70 countries in
33 languages. His short stories were published in Ellery Queen’s
and Alfred Hitchcock’s Mystery Magazines as well as in several
anthologies, and in 2007 he won the Crime Writers of Canada Arthur
Ellis Award for Best Short Story. Sadly, Dennis Richard Murphy passed
away in June 2008, shortly after completing Darkness at the Break
of Noon.
Darkness
at the Break of Noon (2009, HarperCollins Canada)
RCMP Sergeant Booker Kennison knows more dirt than an officer should
and has been exiled by his superiors to duty in Yellowknife. When
a flash fire claims the lives of two archaeologists at a dig on
remote Victory Island in Nunavut, Kennison is dispatched to investigate
in a cold wilderness where winter’s grip and 24-hour darkness
are closing in fast.
Ruby Cruz, ex-FBI agent, is also on her way north, sent to protect
the interests of the American corporation that funded the dig. Those
interests include Dr. Karl Kniesser and a 160-year-old journal he
has secretly cut from the clothing of a frozen corpse. The journal
contains the secrets of the ill-fated Franklin Expedition and may
hold the key to controlling the Northwest Passage today. But when
Ruby arrives, she finds Kniesser dead and the prized journal missing.
As the ice moves in and supplies grow scarce, Kennison confirms
that the two deaths are murders, and the hunt for their killer begins
-- until Kennison himself becomes a target of a secretive assassin
lurking in the barren landscape. Threatened from all sides, Kennison
must solve two mysteries before time and light run out.
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