Cline Investigates
A Cut Throat Business
by
Book Details
About the Book
Bolderdale lay to the southern end of the Yorkshire Dales.
A relatively new town having been in existence since the nineteen fifties, it was about to have it’s relatively peaceful atmosphere and tranquillity shattered by the discovery of the brutally murdered body of a local middle class businessman.
What at first appeared to Inspector John Cline as a possible simple one off crime was soon to develop into a complicated web of intrigue involving blackmail, retribution,
revenge and kidnapping.
With very limited resources at his disposal, and the long standing mutual loathing and resentment between Cline and Superintendent Knowels not helping the situation, a great deal of luck, as well as all his experience would be required before all could rest peacefully again.
With the body count increasing, it soon became obvious that this was no one off murder,
but what was the link that tied them together?
With evidence in short supply at the start of the investigation, it soon became a matter of urgency to find the killer, as the number of bodies rose.
About the Author
Born into a South Yorkshire mining family, just outside the town of
Although only attending a Secondary Modern school in the early 1950’s, he later qualified, first as an electrician and then, as an Electrical Engineer, working in the Coalmining Industry in South Yorkshire. It was during the early 1960’s that he was employed as a Laboratory Engineer at the Aircraft Equipment Division of the English Electric Co. at Bradford.
He worked on the equipment of aircraft such as the English Electric Lightening, the Buccaneer and the famous Concorde.
He was married to Dorothy and together they brought up a son and a daughter, the daughter subsequently produced a loving granddaughter and grandson.
Later in life, his work took him to the four corners of
In addition to being a crossword and puzzle enthusiast, he his an avid reader of crime novels and thrillers. It is this love which inspired him to write his first Inspector Cline novel, adding his own inimitable style to the realms of fictional writing.
He was bereaved just prior to Christmas 2004, when his beloved wife passed away with lung cancer.
Ultimately, he would like, with the help and support of his family, to continue producing ‘Inspector Cline’ mysteries.
His determined, well motivated and focused writing, could be due to his motto for life which is, “If a job is worth doing, then it’s worth doing well”