Jasper's Brood
Jasper's Brood
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Out Now | Crime Fiction | Paperback
Part of our Black Spring Crime Series, endorsed by UK crime fiction giants, Ian Rankin and Lee Child.
It Takes a Killer . . .Foster is not Jasper’s father. He’s the assassin who killed his family. Jasper was eight years old when he was kidnapped and raised by a killer. Not only raised . . . trained.
To Raise a Killer . . .
Jasper has now been a trained assassin for decades. Not only does he kill for a living, he has continued in Foster’s footsteps – raising a ‘family' of his own. Lost souls of the departed. Children who should be dead. Saved by Jasper.
To Raise a Killer . . .
Now, Jasper must contend with the imminent return of his most accomplished protégé, Gulliver. He decides to tell him everything - his life, how he came to be the man he is now, and what has happened to the family since he left. Only, there is someone else out there determined to stop Jasper and find the lost and missing. And they'll stop at nothing to bring an end to what Jasper has built.
Cormac McCarthy meets northeast England in this unforgettable novel, with a fresh and exciting voice from a debut author.
J K Nottingham has lived and written in the North of Scotland, North East England, North West London, and now lives in St. Albans with his wife and their two boys. He has a Masters in Screenwriting and Producing from the University of Westminster, and is alum of the University of Sunderland. He managed an inner city youth centre throughout his twenties. His debut play Lost in Mozart played to sold out theatres in Notting Hill and Edinburgh, the screenplay for which won the British Urban Film Festival's inaugural screenwriting competition.
J K Nottingham has lived and written in the North of Scotland, North East England, North West London, and now lives in St. Albans with his wife and their two boys. He has a Masters in Screenwriting and Producing from the University of Westminster, and is alum of the University of Sunderland. He managed an inner city youth centre throughout his twenties. His debut play Lost in Mozart played to sold out theatres in Notting Hill and Edinburgh, the screenplay for which won the British Urban Film Festival's inaugural screenwriting competition.