Bolinda Home Page

Login

Basket totals

Items:
0
Total:
AUD$ 0.00
Colleen McCullough

Author

Colleen McCullough

Colleen McCullough was born in western New South Wales in 1937. A neuroscientist by training, she worked in various hospitals before settling into ten years of research and teaching in the Department of Neurology at the Yale Medical School in the USA. In 1974 her first novel, Tim, was published in New York, followed by the bestselling The Thorn Birds in 1977 and a string of other successful novels.

Search Results

You searched for 'Colleen McCullough'. 11 results were found.
To add items to your order, enter quantity and click 'add selected products to order'
Title:
Too Many Murders
Series:
Carmine Delmonico #2
Written by:
Colleen McCullough 
Read by:
Bill Ten Eyck 
Format:
Unabridged CD Audio Book 
Number of CDs:
11 
Duration:
13 hours  
Published:
December 01 2009 
Available Date:
June 28 2011 
Age Category:
Adult 
ISBN:
9781742335391 
Genres:
Fiction; Mystery; Police Drama & Forensics 
Publisher:
Bolinda audio 
Qty
Format
Price
Bolinda price
AUD$ 49.95
AUD$ 49.95
 

Bestseller

The new crime novel that will have you up all night from Australia's best-loved storyteller.

It's a beautiful spring day in the little city of Holloman, Connecticut; the year is 1967, and the world teeters on the brink of nuclear holocaust as the Cold War goes relentlessly on. But Holloman has other things to worry about on April 3rd, 1967; twelve murders have take in place on one day. Suddenly Captain Carmine Delmonico, chief of detectives, has other, more important matters to occupy him than finding a satisfactory name for his infant son. With his cohorts Abe Goldberg and Corey Marshall giving him unfailing support, Carmine embarks on what looks like an insoluble case. All the murders are different, and no victim is connected to any of the others. One group centres on the great university, Chubb, while another is inextricably tied to the armaments giant, Cornucopia. And as if twelve murders were not enough, Carmine soon finds himself pitted against the mysterious Ulysses, a spy giving Cornucopia's armaments secrets to the Russians. Are the murders and espionage different cases, or are they somehow linked?