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  • Runtime

    10hr 0m

Missing Person: Alice: a twisty, pathological thriller beginning the Finder Mysteries

Simon Mason

8 Reviews

Rated 0

Modern & contemporary fiction (post c 1945), Crime & mystery, Classic crime

Missing Person: Alice is an explosive mystery of murky truths, in sharp, twisty prose Simon Mason shows that no one version of a missing person is the same.

'Excellently lean and tense crime novel with a touch of the nouveau roman about it' Ian Rankin
'Mason has been mainlining Simenon for a while, and it shows' Mick Herron
'The very definition of unputdownable' David Peace
'It's like the provincial British version of Maigret' Clare Chambers

The people I work with call me 'Finder'. I'm a specialist, a finder of missing people.

July 2015, Sevenoaks. 12-year-old schoolgirl Alice Johnson went missing while doing her paper round, her bag found discarded on the pavement. At 08.00, she was spotted standing in heavy rain at the side of the busy by-pass. At 11.00, she was seen talking to the driver of a black car in Tonbridge. After that, nothing. Alice was never found.

Nine years later the body of another schoolgirl, Joleen Price, is pulled from a nearby lake and a local man named Vince Burns detained. Convinced that Burns is guilty in both cases, SIO Dave Armstrong calls in the Finder to investigate the earlier disappearance.

Interviewing those who thought they knew her, the Finder gradually reveals a hidden Alice, a girl of surprising contradictions. Seeking answers from her divorced parents - an over-protective mother, a negligent father - the Finder is forced to consider violently opposing narratives. Was the timid 12-year-old a victim of the predator Burns, as he himself hints? Or was she carrying out a plan of her own?

The Case of the Lonely Accountant, book two in the Finder Mysteries, is OUT NOW!

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Praise for Missing Person: Alice: a twisty, pathological thriller beginning the Finder Mysteries

  • Simon Mason is one of the brightest new names on the crime scene in years. Utterly compelling, Missing Person: Alice and The Case of the Lonely Accountant are brilliantly constructed mysteries, it is the cool tone in which they're written that's particularly striking, with the narrator carefully navigating his own tragedies while sifting through the traces of cracked lives with a careful humanity. Mason has been mainlining Simenon for a while, and it shows.

  • Short, sharp mysteries . . . [Talib] and his investigations are fascinating. - The Times

  • Extraordinary stories of ordinary lives riven by loss. I lived and breathed these two books for the time it took me to finish them. Absolutely exceptional.

  • Plotting and characterisation are as deft as we have come to expect from the talented Mason, with an elegant use of language. - Financial Times

  • [Simon] instinctively knows how to use and manipulate tropes pleasingly... there is much to enjoy - Crime Time FM

  • With tantalising hints at the sleuthing protagonist's equally murky back story these novellas break the walls of the police procedural down and descend into dark corners. I couldn't put them down. - Crime Time

  • Excellently lean and tense crime novel with a touch of the nouveau roman about it. - Ian Rankin

  • Amply fulfils Ian Rankin's recent admonition against long works. Psychologically, a rich exploration that is full of merited excitement. - The Critic

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