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WHAT DRIVES GOOD MEN TO MURDER?
‘If you’re not a fan yet, why not?’ Val McDermid
‘William Shaw is an outstanding storyteller’ Peter May

‘Grips the reader by the throat and never lets go’ Independent

Sergeant William South has always avoided investigating murder. A passionate birdwatcher and quiet man, he has few relationships and prefers it that way.

But when his only friend is found brutally beaten, South’s detachment is tested. Not only is he bereft – it seems that there’s a connection between the suspect and himself.

For South has a secret. He knows the kind of rage that killed his friend. He knows the kind of man who could do it. He knows, because Sergeant William South himself is a murderer.

Moving from the storm-lashed, bird-wheeling skies of the Kent Coast to the wordless war of the Troubles, The Birdwatcher is a crime novel of suspense, intelligence and powerful humanity about fathers and sons, grief and guilt and facing the darkness within.

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Reviews

C. J. Sansom
Superb description of a haunting, blighted landscape. His best book so far.
Sunday Mirror
A brilliantly constructed thriller, told part in flashback to his traumatic past, it's utterly compulsive, written in sharp, unsentimental style, and with a wonderfully atmospheric storm-battered setting
Barry Forshaw, Independent
What a pleasure it is when one discovers a writer who combines ironclad storytelling techniques with the linguistic finesse of more literary novelists. William Shaw is surely such a writer, a man whose command of narrative grips the reader by the throat from page one, and never lets go - but also allows every word to register with exactly the right amount of resonance. And that's not to forget the idiomatic dialogue, which is another Shaw specialty . . . The Birdwatcher, it might be argued, is Shaw's most accomplished (and most visceral) book yet . . . [The] unsparing treatment of the personality of South - and the dark drives that can lead people to murder - that is at the chilling heart of this book
John Williams, Mail on Sunday
a fine, atmospheric, emotionally compelling thriller
Sun
A gripping plot, atmospheric setting, highly believable characters and dialogue you can imagine real people saying, make this a contender for thriller of the year
Elly Griffiths
An astoundingly good crime novel
Telegraph
Packs an emotional punch that hits all the harder because of the absence of histrionics. Crime Books of the Year
Peter May
The Birdwatcher: the most gripping book I've read in years. William Shaw is, quite simply, an outstanding storyteller
Val McDermid
If you're not a fan yet, why not?