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Where the Bodies Lie

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

"Sins don't destroy people here. Dreams do."

In a small city somewhere in an oil-rich Canadian province just east of the Rockies, a political scandal has erupted: an aging cabinet minister has struck and killed a member of his local constituency executive with his half-ton truck, in broad daylight. But the premier suspects that there is more to this "accident" than meets the eye—and he wants to know the real reasons behind it before the media or his political rivals do.

Enter the premier's old friend Harry Asher—lawyer, former hockey star, self-styled intellectual, and recent divorcé—who is hired to dig into the incident. And it isn't long before Asher's investigation threatens to expose a chain of corruption that implicates many of the province's most powerful citizens—including the province's legendary now-senile premier—as well as its most cherished founding myths.

In Where the Bodies Lie, Mark Lisac draws upon his decades of experience as a reporter at Alberta's provincial legislature to craft an absorbing debut novel—part political thriller, part fable—that opens up timeless themes of friendship, love, the inescapability of grief, the weight of history, and the nature of truth.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      February 13, 2017
      Lisac’s first foray into fiction, a political crime novel set in an unnamed oil-rich Canadian province, stumbles into some rookie pitfalls. The province is clearly a thinly veiled Alberta, which is a geographic and political landscape Lisac knows well from his years as newspaper reporter, columnist, and author (Alberta Politics Uncovered). In the novel, Lisac renames towns, writes around specific locations, and farcically turns the right-wing Wildrose Party into the Western Wildcat Party. The renaming is awkward and the reasons for it are unclear, since the setting and the party will be obvious to most readers. The story begins when lawyer Harry Asher is hired by his friend Premier Jim Karamanlis to quietly investigate an incident in which a truck-driving cabinet minister struck and killed a member of his local constituency executive. The premier fears it wasn’t an accident. Lisac’s knowledge of the well-oiled political machine that runs Alberta is apparent, but the scandal intended to drive the plot forward is insufficiently scandalous (though perhaps it is perfectly Canadian in that regard). The book is full of exposition that squeezes out plot and dialogue, and the pace is further slowed by frequent descriptions of scenery that don’t always add to the story.

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  • English

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