Dead Letters
<b>Words can be deadly…</b><br /><br />Harold Grant is in the debt-collecting business with his brother-in-law, and it is fair to say he is not happy.<br /><br />After suffering bankruptcy, Harold has sunk into a deep pit of depression, and intends to end it all. <br /><br />He posts three suicide letters.<br /><br />One to his wife, one to his brother-in-law, and one to a mysterious third party. <br /><br />The first two letters are so damaging to their recipients, that they dare not show them to the police. <br /><br />But with no corpse and no apparent suicide letter, the police can only regard Harold as another missing person and the case is closed.<br /><br />But this leaves Harold’s brother-in-law and wife asking questions.<br /><br />Who received the third letter?<br /><br />Where was Harold’s body?<br /><br />With no help from the police, the brother and sister duo launch their own investigation, thus beginning a strange chain of events, with some startling revelations…<br /><br />Guaranteed to keep you guessing until the very end and send chills down your spine, <em>Dead Letters</em> is a thrilling murder mystery.<br /><br /> <h2> Praise for John Burke</h2><br /><br />"Murder, conspiracy, secrets....it's got everything!" - <b>Thomas Waugh</b><br /><br /><b>John Burke</b> was born in Rye, Sussex, in 1922 and worked in the publishing industry before becoming an author of novels and short stories. He passed away in September 2011.