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Murder at Cape Three Points by Kwei Quartey
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Murder at Cape Three Points

Best Seller
Murder at Cape Three Points by Kwei Quartey
Paperback $16.95
Feb 17, 2015 | ISBN 9781616954833

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  • $16.95

    Feb 17, 2015 | ISBN 9781616954833

    Buy from Other Retailers:

Product Details

Praise

Praise for Murder at Cape Three Points

An ABA IndieNext Selection

“Smart, suspenseful, and politically astute.” 
Bustle

“For hardcore Darko fans, and newcomers as well, this is a page-turner.”
—PRI’s The World

“Quartey provides such a strong sense of Ghana that you’ll be wishing for a platter of kenkey, a staple food made from fermented corn, to keep you from biting your nails to the quick as Dawson winnows down the list of suspects to solve the mystery.”
—Oprah.com

“Offers a more contemporary portrait of corporate greed on the continent than McCall Smith’s gentle portrait of rural crime.”
Daily Mail (UK)

“In the context of a world still working on cleaning up the Gulf of Mexico oil spill, and where oil companies’ main hope of expansion comes from high-risk deep water drilling, Quartey’s message could not be more timely.”
—Scott Montgomery, Book People Bookstore, Austin, TX

“Quartey portrays a the country of Ghana with all its charms and quirks, a culture that stands at the brink of the modern world, yet has not lost its tribal traditions. The result is a thoroughly fascinatng book.”
—Janice Hunsche, Kaleidosaurus Books, Fishers, IN

“[Inspector Darko Dawson plunges] into a case involving corporations, community rivalries, and far-reaching family vendettas involving black magic. Absorbing for history, contemporary upheavals, plotting, and Dawson’s personality.”
—Booklist

“Quartey’s mastery of the art of misdirection serves him well in his third mystery featuring Accra, Ghana, homicide detective Darko Dawson … A complex plot, combined with a warts-and-all lead and an evocative portrayal of the author’s native country, add up to a winner.”
Publishers Weekly, STARRED Review

“Fans of Alexander McCall Smith’s “No. 1 Ladies’ Detective Agency” series will enjoy the African setting and the large cast of interesting characters, while the twists and turns of Quartey’s plotting will satisfy any choosy mystery fan.”
—Library Journal

“Darko Dawson’s third case is his biggest and most ambitious yet … Quartey lays out what feel like endless possibilities with exemplary patience and clarity, unveiling world beneath world in Dawson’s Ghana.”
—Kirkus Reviews

“Kwei Quartey writes incredibly well about Ghana, about crime, and about the people he has created. If you’re an armchair traveling sleuth like I am, I advise you to add him to your list of must-reads.”
—Kittling Books

“I particularly appreciate being able to travel there [Ghana] in this way, through the eyes of an author who experiences multiple cultures, and a police officer who has reason to challenge his environment.”
—Kingdom Books

Praise for Kwei Quartey

“A sensitive novel of powerful family passions, set in the unique and vivid colors of Ghana.”
—Anne Perry

“Kwei Quartey does what all the best storytellers do. He takes you to a world you have never seen and makes it as real to you as your own backyard. Inspector Darko Dawson is relentless and I look forward to riding with him again.”
—Michael Connelly

“An absolute gem of a first novel and the sort of book that will delight not only hard-core mystery fans, but also those who visit the genre only casually in search of an occasional literary entertainment…. Wife of the Gods undoubtedly will be compared with Alexander McCall Smith’s phenomenally successful No. 1 Ladies’ Detective Agency series, but Quartey’s debut is—to this reader, at least—a far richer and more sophisticated experience.”
Los Angeles Times

“[A] crisp, engrossing debut…. [Quartey] renders a compelling cast of characters inhabiting a world precariously perched between old and new. Fans of McCall Smith’s No. 1 Ladies’ Detective Agency novels will relish the opportunity to discover yet another intriguing area of Africa.”
Booklist, Starred Review

“Quartey convincingly portrays the seedy underbelly of Accra, Ghana’s capital city…. Quartey cleverly hides the culprit, but the whodunit’s strength is as much in the depiction of a world largely unfamiliar to an American readership as in its playing fair.”
Publishers Weekly, Starred Review

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