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The Grave Tattoo by Val McDermid — book cover

The Grave Tattoo

by Val McDermid
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Overview

From bestselling author Val McDermid comes a modern thriller about an ancient murder set on the high seas…

“Exciting…wildly beautiful” —The New York Times Book Review

After summer rains uncover a corpse bearing tattoos like those of eighteenth-century seafarers, many residents of the English Lake District can’t help but wonder whether it’s the body of one of the town’s most legendary fugitives.

“An old-fashioned detective yarn with enough modern touches to keep a reader on her toes.”—Salon.com

Scholar and native Lakelander Jane Gresham feels compelled to finally discover the truth about the myths and buried secrets rooted in her hometown. What she never expected was to find herself at the heart of a 200-year-old mystery that still has the power to put lives on the line. And with each new lead she pursues, death follows hard on her heels….

“Extraordinary.”—The Boston Globe

Synopsis

Against the backdrop of England's Lake District, a drama of life and death plays out, its ultimate prize a bounty worth millions

The New York Times - Marilyn Stasio

Once all these narrative balls are tossed in the air, McDermid provides enough violence to add real urgency to her intriguing premise, which the late curator of the Wordsworth Trust declared improbable, but charmingly plausible. Even without the melodramatic plot twists, the novel s scholarship is exciting on its own terms, and entirely appropriate for a district so wildly beautiful that it attracts both poets and pirates.

About the Author, Val McDermid

VAL MCDERMID was a journalist for sixteen years and is now a full-time writer and lives in South Manchester. In 1995, she won the Gold Dagger Award for Best Crime Novel of the Year. Her novel, A Place of Execution, won a Los Angeles Times Book Prize, was nominated for the Edgar Award for Best Novel, and named a New York Times Notable Book of the Year.

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Editorials

From Barnes & Noble

The Barnes & Noble Review
Blending psychological suspense with compelling historical fiction, Scottish crime writer Val McDermid's The Grave Tattoo revolves around a 200-year-old mystery involving the infamous Fletcher Christian (leader of the 1789 mutiny aboard the British Royal Navy ship Bounty) and a lost masterwork from English Romantic poet William Wordsworth.

When an unusually rainy summer uncovers a "body in the bog" in England's Lake District, struggling Wordsworth scholar Jane Gresham is drawn into the mystery surrounding the 200-year-old, tattooed body. Part-time barmaid Gresham investigates, only to uncover information that could confirm the rumor that the legendary mutineer Christian didn't die in a massacre on Pitcairn Island in the South Pacific as thought but eventually made his way back to England, where he lived out the rest of his days in virtual anonymity. When Gresham begins to link her findings to a lost epic poem by Wordsworth -- Christian and the poet were contemporaries at the same school -- she suddenly finds herself in mortal danger…

Reminiscent of other historically based literary mysteries like Matthew Pearl's The Poe Shadow and The Rule of Four by Ian Caldwell and Dustin Thomason, McDermid's novel has been compared to Dan Brown's monolithic The Da Vinci Code for good reason. Readers will find themselves enthralled throughout, entangled in the early-19th-century mystery surrounding Christian and Wordsworth -- highly recommended. Paul Goat Allen

Marilyn Stasio

Once all these narrative balls are tossed in the air, McDermid provides enough violence to add real urgency to her intriguing premise, which the late curator of the Wordsworth Trust declared “improbable, but charmingly plausible.” Even without the melodramatic plot twists, the novel’s scholarship is exciting on its own terms, and entirely appropriate for a district so wildly beautiful that it attracts both poets and pirates.
— The New York Times

Publishers Weekly

An intriguing, 200-year-old mystery propels this multilayered stand-alone from British author McDermid set in England's Lake District. Scholar Jane Gresham pursues her theory that HMS Bounty mutineer Fletcher Christian returned secretly from exile to his homeland in the late 18th century. A shriveled body found in a bog seems to bear resemblance to this dashing hero, right down to the South Sea tattoos that blacken his buttocks. Jane searches relentlessly for a lost manuscript by the poet Wordsworth that relates Christian's tale in tantalizing excerpts between chapters. Various subplots complicate her quest, including a fraught friendship with precocious 13-year-old Tenille, a lonely, mixed-race girl who also loves Romantic poetry. With a feminist, socially conscious spin, McDermid (The Distant Echo) vividly contrasts marginal subsistence in London's dismal Marshpool neighborhood with the Lake District's bucolic lifestyle. Boasting blurbs from such notable authors as Harlan Coben, Tess Gerritsen and Joseph Finder, this could be McDermid's break-out book. 100,000 printing; author tour. (Feb.) Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information.

Library Journal

McDermid's (The Torment of Others) latest novel begins with the discovery in a Lake District bog of an old body bearing distinctive Polynesian tattoos from the 1800s. Jane Gresham, a William Wordsworth scholar who was raised near where the body is found, has always been intrigued by the local legend that Fletcher Christian wasn't killed on Pitcairn Island and wonders whether the body could be his. She knows that Christian and Wordsworth were schoolmates and has found a letter pointing to a secret manuscript Wordsworth may have written that she hypothesizes may tell the story of the mutiny on the Bounty from Christian's viewpoint. However, Jane is not the only one interested in the existence of the manuscript-and someone may be willing to kill for it. McDermid is the winner of numerous mystery/detective book awards, and her latest effort is sure to please her fans, although new readers may be disappointed that the novel is less about the historical characters than the modern ones. Recommended.-Lisa O'Hara, Univ. of Manitoba Libs., Winnepeg Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information.

School Library Journal

Adult/High School
During an English summer of record-breaking rains, a peat bog in the Lake District opens to reveal a 200-year-old body bearing South Pacific island tattoos. The area, home to Romantic poets, is where Jane Gresham, Wordsworth scholar, grew up, and she finds her interest piqued by the news. She has long believed that Fletcher Christian, HMS Bounty mutineer, didn't die on Pitcairn Island but returned to England. She has theorized that Christian recounted his adventures to his old schoolmate Wordsworth, who wrote them down, and those documents and a related poem, now worth millions, lay forgotten in a local home. In the race to retrieve the valuable manuscripts, Jane finds herself competing against sinister forces that would stop at nothing, including murder, to reach them first. The suspenseful story and its subplots, which include Jane's friendship with 13-year-old poetry-loving Tenille, who lives in Jane's London public housing project, create an absorbing thriller. McDermid establishes a strong sense of place in the atmospheric and pastoral Lake District that contrasts sharply with the sprawling housing project. Historical and literary references to Wordsworth's life and work and to the South Pacific adventures of the Bounty mutineers all help to make this novel come alive. Teens will enjoy the lively characters, brisk pace, and careful unraveling of the centuries-old mystery with its satisfactory conclusion.
—Susanne BardelsonCopyright 2006 Reed Business Information.

Kirkus Reviews

An ambitious reworking of the demi-historical mode of Possession with a mutiny substituting for one love story and a series of murders taking the place of the other. Ever since her childhood days in the Lake Country hamlet of Fellhead, Jane Gresham has wondered about the rumor that Bounty mutineer Fletcher Christian escaped the slaughter at Pitcairn Island and returned to England with a tale that gave his old schoolmate William Wordsworth material for a lost epic poem. When a corpse that could be Christian's is found in a Fellhead peat bog, Jane talks her boss into giving her two weeks off to see if she can locate any trace of a Wordsworthian Mutiny on the Bounty. Despite her inside track on the connection between the sailor and the poet, however, there are some important things Jane doesn't know. She doesn't know that she's racing her unscrupulous ex-lover Jake Hartnell and her brother Matthew, a resentful local schoolmaster, for the poem. She doesn't know that Tenille Cole, a tough kid she befriended in London, has come running after her with the police in hot pursuit. And she doesn't know that one of the people competing with her for the prize doesn't mind killing to get it. The criminal is obvious and Tenille's behavior incredible. But McDermid (The Torment of Others, 2005, etc.) handles the interplay between past and present with masterful and infectious conviction. First printing of 100,000

From the Publisher


“A world-class crime novelist at the top of her game.”—George Pelecanos, author of Hard Revolution
 
“Val McDermid at her very best.”—Joseph Finder, New York Times bestselling author of Company Man
 
“It is difficult to find words to capture the masterful achievement that is Val McDermid’s The Grave Tattoo.”—Laura Lippman
 
“If you haven’t discovered her genius yet, you are in for a rare treat.”—Harlan Coben, New York Times bestselling author of The Innocent
 
“Absorbing modern mystery...McDermid’s mix of historical and literary clues with modern detection is handled with panache.”—The Times (London)
 
“One of our most accomplished crime writers...compelling.”—Glasgow Herald
 
“An irresistible combination of contemporary psychological thriller and historical mystery filled with the moody atmosphere of the Lake District.”—Tess Gerritsen, New York Times bestselling author of Harvest  “I’ve been a Val McDermid fan forever...like all her work, The Grave Tattoo is an experience...a visceral entertainment that leaves you panting right up to the shattering climax .”—Ridley Pearson, New York Times bestselling author of The Kingdom Keepers

Book Details

Published
April 1, 2008
Publisher
St. Martin's Press
Pages
448
Format
Mass Market Paperback
ISBN
9780312936105

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