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This is the first time there is such a murder case in Inspector Maddy’s area. And he cannot let the murderer escape. Dinesh and Pratap are the main suspects. But they have no idea how they did it or even what they did. It looks like they’d be behind bars before long. Surili is an aspiring crime journalist, and there are certain things about this murder that are known only to her. Peek inside to find how Inspector Maddy and Surili prove it as The Imperfect Crime.
..."a compelling piece of work, strongly evocative of an era that seems, more and more, to have been one of the most extraordinary periods in our history . The unions, the mobs, the plots, the characters."Don DeLillo
The perfect crime turns into perfect tragedy for Peter Simpson, a young writer in Phoenix, desperate to get his book published. He will do anything to get noticed, even murder. But it all goes very wrong when he is executed for a crime he did not commit. The sole witness who could have saved him has disappeared without a trace. Only his priest, Father Guillermo Montero believes he is innocent. Together with the help of Detective Lori Sanchez of the Phoenix PD, who always thought that Simpson was framed, Montero resolves to find the missing witness and prove Simpson¿s innocence. Gun, drug and sex crimes, a woman¿s kidnapping and the sinister activities of a local gang with ties to the Sinaloa Cartel all cross paths with their investigation. One last clue linking the missing witness, and his mysterious girlfriend and the notorious Cartel enforcer named José allows the duo to solve the interwoven crimes and expose a serial killer. In the end, Simpson is exonerated.Part Girl with the Dragon Tattoo and part Dirty Harry, the story twists and turns as Detective Sanchez and Father Montero keep you guessing.
"This book is a series of stories in which I ask, again and again, 'how to be in relation to the suffering of others.' It is a personal narrative about the political journey I have taken over the last twenty years as a humanitarian doctor, as a citizen, and as a man. This is a story about a way of seeing that requires humility, so that one can recognize the sameness of self in the other. It is about the mutuality that can exist between us, if we so choose. I have come to see humanitarianism not as separate from politics, but in relation to it, and as a challenge to political choices that too often kill or allow others to be killed. Speaking is the first political act. It is the first act of liberty, and it always implicitly involves another. In speaking, one inherently recognizes that 'I am and I am not alone.' In this space lies our humanity." Having seen things we hope never to see, confronted suffering, dispassion, and evil we hope never to encounter, and faced deep personal torment, James Orbinski still believes in "the good we can be if we so choose." His chosen medium is stories from his own experience-a form of testimony from the front lines-embodied in which are warnings, hope, and lessons in how we can inject humanitarian activity into our lives. Being political, he has discovered, is not only reserved for politicians; admitting imperfection is essential to compassion. The crystal clarity of Orbinski's voice is matched by the urgency of his message; at a time of great political and moral uncertainty, An Imperfect Offering is invaluable reading for anyone who feels he/she can make a difference.
This is the first time there is such a murder case in Inspector Maddy's area. And he cannot let the murderer escape. Dinesh and Pratap are the main suspects. But they have no idea how they did it or even what they did. It looks like they'd be behind bars before long. Surili is an aspiring crime journalist, and there are certain things about this murder that are known only to her. Peek inside to find how Inspector Maddy and Surili prove it as The Imperfect Crime.
On a normal day in provincial China, a teenager goes about his regular business, but he’s also planning the brutal murder of his only friend. He lures her over, strangles her, stuffs her body into the washing machine and flees town, whereupon a perilous game of cat-and-mouse begins. A shocking investigation into the despair that traps the rural poor as well as a technically brilliant excursion into the claustrophobic realm of classic horror and suspense, A Perfect Crime is a thrilling and stylish novel about a motiveless murder that echoes Kafka’s absurdism, Camus’ nihilism and Dostoyevsky’s depravity. With exceptional tonal control, A Yi steadily reveals the psychological backstory that enables us to make sense of the story’s dramatic violence and provides chillingly apt insights into a country on the cusp of enormous social, political and economic change.