Dec 11, · Misery Bay [an Alex McKnight Novel] (Book): Hamilton, Steve: The New York Times Bestseller One of The Boston Globe 's Best Mysteries of ALEX MCKNIGHT IS BACK in the long-awaited return of one of crime fiction's most critically acclaimed series. On a frozen January night, a young man loops one end of a long rope over the branch of a tree. "Misery Bay" the eighth Alex McKnight thriller from author Steve Hamilton is one of those books to just sit down and read start to finish in less than 24 hours. Without counting a couple of minor stops I read this one in just a sitting/5(). On a frozen January night, a young man loops one end of a long rope over the branch of a tree. The other end he ties around his neck. A snowmobiler will find him thirty-six hours later, his lifeless eyes Author: Steve Hamilton.
Books by Steve Hamilton. Born and raised in Detroit, Steve Hamilton graduated from the University of Michigan where he won the prestigious Hopwood Award for fiction. His novels have won numerous awards and media acclaim beginning with the very first in the Alex McKnight series, A. . Add to bookshelf. Misery Bay by Steve Hamilton Chapter One It is the third night of January, two hours past midnight, and everyone is in bed except this man. He is young and there's no earthly reason for him to be here on this shoreline piled with snow with a freezing wind coming in off of Lake Superior. Misery Bay (Alex McKnight, #8) Published January by Orion Books. Hardcover, pages. Author (s): Steve Hamilton (Goodreads Author) ISBN: (ISBN ) Edition language: English.
On a frozen January night, a young man loops one end of a long rope over the branch of a tree. The other end he ties around his neck. A snowmobiler will find. Misery Bay by Steve Hamilton A book that is set in a place you live or at least visited always seems more interesting and the upper peninsula in Michigan is one of my favorite places. Yet even if I had never been there Hamilton does such a great job that one can feel the extreme cold and at times the desolation and loneliness of living there. On a frozen January night, a young man loops one end of a long rope over the branch of a tree. The other end he ties around his neck. A snowmobiler will find him thirty-six hours later, his lifeless eyes staring out at the endless cold water of Lake Superior. It happens in a lonely corner of the Upper Peninsula, in a place they call Misery Bay.
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