£5.99
Somme Stations
WINNER OF THE ELLIS PETERS AWARD
Superb. Lancashire Evening Post
Richly satisfying. Sunday Telegraph
On the first day of the Somme enlisted railwayman Jim Stringer lies trapped in a shell hole, smoking cigarette after cigarette under the bullets and the blazing sun. He calculates his chances of survival - even before they departed for France, a member of Jim's unit had been found dead.
During the stand-off that follows, Jim and his comrades must operate by night the vitally important trains carrying munitions to the Front, through a ghostly landscape of shattered trees where high explosive and shrapnel shells rain down. Close co-operation and trust are vital. Yet proof piles up of an enemy within, and as a ferocious military policeman pursues his investigation into the original killing, the finger of accusation begins to point towards Jim himself . . .
The real achievement of The Somme Stations is the bravura picture the reader is given of men in war - a war receding in time as the last participants die, but which Martin subtly allows to stand in for all conflicts.
Barry Forshaw, Independent
Praise for the Jim Stringer series:
Breathe in the heady mixture of smoke, oil and steam - and the odd spot of real ale - and feel the crunch of cinders beneath your feet... you're in historic railway territory again.
Finely honed crime novels with plotting as precise as a Swiss watch.
This series is, er, really building up a head of steam.
Readers love Jim Stringer, railway detective:
It's hard to envisage anyone not warming to Jim Stringer.
An unlikely sleuth - ingenuous, naive and a little anxious - but an endearing narrator, a solid bloke who'd be good company over a pint of stout down the pub.
The best sleuth that 200 years of the railways have ever produced.