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To Highlight The Corruption

Author Interview
Peter Gray Author Interview

Angel of Death follows a grieving Irish detective whose search for the truth, sparked by a skeleton in a Kerry bog, leads him from family tragedy into a brutal web of corruption, power, and reckoning. What was the inspiration for the setup of your story?

Had you asked me this when I started writing, I would have had difficulty answering. Now, it’s clearly that I wanted to highlight the corruption in Thoroughbred racing and breeding, a world I lived in for many years.

Trey O’Driscoll’s inner life feels central to the novel. How much of the story began with his emotional arc versus the plot itself?

Realistically, O’Driscoll only developed for me as the story unfolded. I had no prior thoughts on him as a character, except that physically he was based on someone I knew who wasn’t anything like the character I created. I would have to say that perhaps he behaved as I would, had I been a policeman in this situation.

By the end, the book holds both tragedy and hope. What feeling did you most want readers to sit with after turning the final page?

I would like them to see the corruption so that, hopefully one day, something might be done about it.

What is the next book that you are working on, and when will it be available?

I’ve written a memoir that’s currently being looked at. I also have a novel I had put aside and am re-writing.

Author Links: Amazon | GoodReads

The Caffrey family are cutting turf on a Kerry bog when their sheepdog presents them with a human bone.

Garda Detective-Inspector Trey O’Driscoll is tasked with the duty of investigating the find. From the outset, he suspects foul play and investigation of the bog produces pieces of evidence that lead to a UK jeweller, who comes up with two names. Through this, records of a horse kidnap emerge and Driscoll has thoughts of the disappearance of Shergar, the Derby winner. Not believing earlier investigators, he has his own beliefs.

An athlete dies of lethal drugs surreptitiously laced into innocent looking tablets. Driscoll establishes a source but his Chief Inspector won’t entertain an enquiry for an undisclosed reason. Evidence leads to a manufacturer on a Greek island who also happens to be a major racehorse owner in the UK.

Into this scenario a beautiful freelance journalist insinuates herself. From tit-bits of information, she anticipates where the heart of the investigation will lead, gets a job as a stable hand in a critical racing yard, working under cover.

Ultimately, it’s she who unearths the critical evidence leading to the unfurling of this spine-tingling murder mystery.

Angel of Death

Angel of Death spins together a murder mystery, an Irish family drama, and a dark plunge into corruption that stretches from quiet boglands to a billionaire’s island fortress. The story follows Detective Trey O’Driscoll as a skeleton turns up in a Kerry bog and the death of his brother-in-law shatters his home life. One discovery leads to another. Drugs hiding inside sports supplements. A charming but monstrous tycoon who toys with lives. A journalist pulled into danger. And a trail that runs all the way to a final confrontation where everything breaks apart. The book moves with steady tension as it threads family, grief, crime, and obsession into one long tightening knot.

I found myself pulled in by the rawness of its emotion. The writing has a rough edge that hits hard. Scenes jump from tender to brutal so fast that it left me blinking, which I actually liked. The everyday details of Ireland feel lived in. The bogs, the farms, the crowded roads, the pubs, the families that love each other and fight each other. It all rang true. I kept feeling a strange mix of calm and dread because the book sits with grief in such a natural way. Trey’s inner life, shaped by past mistakes and a sense of fate, hooked me more than the plot twists did. The man hurts, and that hurt pulses through the pages.

The story goes big with its villain. Charlie Teeman is wild. Cold and flashy and cruel. His scenes shocked me, partly because he is written with such quiet confidence in his own power. I felt a jolt each time he appeared. It is outrageous and almost unbelievable, yet the book commits to him so fully that I went along for the ride. The mix of intimate Irish realism and high-voltage crime thriller sometimes felt like two different worlds stitched together. It worked for me, though. I found myself flipping pages fast, curious to see which world would take over next.

Angel of Death is full of tragedy and violence, but it also carries a stubborn hope for justice and love. I would recommend Angel of Death to readers who enjoy crime fiction with heart, people who like Irish settings, and anyone who wants a story that swings between gritty truth and dramatic flair. If you like mysteries that carry emotional weight along with danger, this one will suit you well.

Pages: 253 | ASIN: B0B9T3CQPY

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