Strange Things Done

Read Strange Things Done Online

Authors: Elle Wild

Tags: #Thrillers, #Women Sleuths, #Suspense, #Fiction, #Noir, #Mystery & Detective

Strange Things Done
Elle Wild
Dundurn (2016)
Rating: ★★★★★
Tags: Fiction, Thrillers, Suspense, Noir, Mystery & Detective, Women Sleuths
Fictionttt Thrillersttt Suspensettt Noirttt Mystery & Detectivettt Women Sleuthsttt

2015 Unhanged Arthur Award for Best Unpublished First Crime Novel — Winner
2014 Telegraph/Harvill Secker Crime Competition — Shortlisted
2014 Southwest Writers Annual Novel Writing Contest — Silver Winner
2014 Criminal Lines Crime-Writing Competition — Shortlisted
2014 Amazon Breakthrough Novel Award — Longlisted

A dark and suspenseful noir thriller, set in the Yukon.

As winter closes in and the roads snow over in Dawson City, Yukon, newly arrived journalist Jo Silver investigates the dubious suicide of a local politician and quickly discovers that not everything in the sleepy tourist town is what it seems. Before long, law enforcement begins treating the death as a possible murder and Jo is the prime suspect.

Strange Things Done
is a top-notch thriller — a tense and stylish crime novel that explores the double themes of trust and betrayal.

**

Review

Elle Wild’s
Strange Things Done
is a boisterous tale of small town eccentrics, dark secrets, and strange things done in the bush, all delivered in crisp, expert prose. Wild’s suspenseful tale of murder and mayhem in the Yukon delivers on its promise of noir thrills and chills. (
Gail Anderson-Dargatz, author of The Cure for Death by Lightning and A Recipe for Bees
)

What a wonderful dark, quirky, and complex debut novel this is. Canada’s north was never more sinister. Jo Silver is a character who needs more than one book. (
Ian Hamilton, author of the internationally bestselling Ava Lee series
)

The title is perfect, the characters fully developed, the plot well-paced and gripping, but this is above all a novel about setting. And what a setting it is. Dawson City, Yukon, as the tourists flee and the long, dark, lonely winter settles in. The airport and roads close, the winds blow, and the snow piles up, trapping those who remain in town, including a journalist haunted by a tragic mistake and so determined not to make it again that events begin repeating themselves. This is the Dawson City of relentless gamblers, heavy drinkers, tattooed bar girls, ruthless miners, and people who’ve reached the end of the road and find there is nowhere left to go. The perfect setting for a novel about conflicted people and dark ambition. (
Vicki Delany, author of the Constable Molly Smith series
)

[A]n entertaining story that captures much of the surrealism of the North and the colorful characters drawn to it. (
Publishers Weekly
)

A remote Canadian community hunkering down for a grim, lonely winter is the perfect setting for this atmospheric crime novel. (
Library Journal
)

Book Description

Strange Things Done – MP

ADVERTISING
Consumer ads: Literary Review of Canada, Walrus, BC Bookworld
Library wholesaler ads: Whitehots, United Library Service
Trade ads: Booklist, Quill & Quire
Online ads: NetGalley, Goodreads, 49th Shelf, CBC Books
Books for Everybody submission

EVENTS
Festival pitches
Event promotion: posters, e-cards
Trade shows, school and library conferences

DIGITAL MARKETING
Twitter, Facebook, Pinterest, Instagram, Dundurn.com campaigns
Goodreads giveaway
Cover and sample chapter reveal
Q&A with author on dundurn.com and consumer newsletter
3 minute video book trailer
Digital Reader Copies available: NetGalley, Edelweiss
Consumer, library, bookseller, and author newsletters

PUBLICITY
Targeted media and blogger review mailings
Advanced Reader Copies available, enhanced quantity
Key Influencer mailing
Niche marketing to associations and interest groups

MARKETING MATERIALS
Bookmarks
Sample chapter teaser

Book website: http://www.ellewild.com/project/book-2/
Book hashtag: #StrangeThingsDone

Author Website: http://www.ellewild.com/
Author Blog: http://www.wild-tonic.com/
Author Twitter: @ElleWild_writer 

For Mr. Wild and Max Wild.

And for Sally Whitehead.

Table of Contents

 
  1. Dedication
  2. Prologue
  3. 1
  4. 2
  5. 3
  6. 4
  7. 5
  8. 6
  9. 7
  10. 8
  11. 9
  12. 10
  13. 11
  14. 12
  15. 13
  16. 14
  17. 15
  18. 16
  19. 17
  20. 18
  21. 19
  22. 20
  23. 21
  24. 22
  25. 23
  26. 24
  27. 25
  28. 26
  29. 27
  30. 28
  31. 29
  32. 30
  33. 31
  34. 32
  35. 33
  36. 34
  37. 35
  38. 36
  39. 37
  40. 38
  41. 39
  42. Acknowledgements

Prologue

The pattern of her demise became suddenly clear, as though a dark kaleidoscope had just been turned. Everything snapped into focus then: the sharpness of the stars, the bowed outlines of trees, the expression on his face.

A blast of arctic air hit her with such force that it made her gasp and take a step back, breaking a crisp skin of snow. He moved forward, her partner in the same terrible dance. The air between them was charged, and out of the corner of her vision she saw something flash, as though the intent written on his face had become a tangible, physical force. She turned to flee into the shadows of the forest, but he caught the sleeve of her parka, then grabbed her by the throat. Impossible to twist away, though she railed and shoved. He swung her hard and the kaleidoscope turned again—filling her with a bright shower of sparks and then blackness.

Gradually she heard a distant clamour and something being dragged; that something was her. But what really bothered her was the bone-aching cold.

She opened her eyes and found herself staring up at tangle of stars. She marvelled for a moment at the emerald hue of the sky. How did she get here? Where was she going? The stars looked jittery. Not quite right. She felt like some lost explorer, painfully scanning from the Great Bear to Polaris, as though mapping the night sky would help pinpoint her location. But the stars would not stay still and it hurt to look at them. She turned her head away and saw instead the jagged silhouette of trees flashing past in jerky stops and starts. Snow and ice scraped against her cheek.

She felt herself lifted into the air and seated on something. A fence, perhaps. For one teetery moment, she balanced there, her arms hung loosely around someone’s shoulders like a sleepy child. Somewhere below her, the roaring grew louder. She was dimly aware of a tilting feeling, the needling scent of pine, and that she was slipping backwards. She lifted her head and their eyes met, a fleeting exchange filled with mutual surprise, and she remembered everything.

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