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  • Published: 25 September 2013
  • ISBN: 9780141030289
  • Imprint: Michael Joseph
  • Format: Paperback
  • Pages: 336
  • RRP: $24.99

Two Evils





Big brand name crime-writing from the bestselling R&J pick authors of Want to Play?

A missing teenage girl lies dead in a parking lot. Two young immigrants are killed in their apartment. Three men are found dead in the street nearby.

As the police struggle to establish what's happened, they realize that the deaths may not be as random as they first appear. As the killings continue, homicide detectives Magozzi and Rolseath turn to maverick computer analyst Grace McBride for help, drawing her into an investigation that will threaten her life.

And as the evidence mounts, it reveals terrifying intent. Ultimately, it forces the two detectives to make a dreadful choice: down which path does the lesser of two evils lie . . .

  • Published: 25 September 2013
  • ISBN: 9780141030289
  • Imprint: Michael Joseph
  • Format: Paperback
  • Pages: 336
  • RRP: $24.99

About the authors

P. J. Tracy

P. J. Tracy is a pseudonym for the mother-daughter writing team of P. J. and Traci Lambrecht.  P. J. lives on a farm outside Minneapolis, Minnesota, and Traci lives in Southern California and divides her time between there, Minneapolis and Aspen, Colorado.  They have written three novels: Want to Play? (published in America as Monkeewrench), Live Bait and Dead Run.  Their fourth, Snow Blind, will publish in hardback in Autumn 2006.

Praise for Two Evils

Outrageously suspenseful

Harlan Coben

A fast-paced gripping read with thrills and devilish twists

Guardian

All of the elements that made the previous books under the Tracy banner so successful are in evidence in Two Evils... plotting of immense ingenuity and the authors' gift for genuinely speakable, sardonic dialogue

welovethisbook.com

A truly brilliant crime thriller, fast-paced and edgy, full of deception and retribution with the essential incredible twist!

Newmarket Journal

A powerful thriller and an ingenious plot

Observer Review

Some of the best new blood work in the genre . . . Scary funny, witty, and genuinely perplexing right to the end

Glasgow Herald
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