A DARKER DOMAIN


Fife, Scotland, 1984. Mick Prentice abandons his family at the height of a politically charged national miners’ strike to join the strikebreakers down south. Despised and disowned by friends and relatives, he is not reported missing until twenty-three years later.

Fife, Scotland, 1985. Kidnapped heiress Catriona Maclennan Grant is killed and her baby son vanishes when the ransom payoff goes horribly wrong. In 2008, a tourist in Tuscany stumbles upon dramatic new evidence that reopens the investigation.

Already immersed in the Prentice affair, Detective Karen Pirie,

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Fife, Scotland, 1984. Mick Prentice abandons his family at the height of a politically charged national miners’ strike to join the strikebreakers down south. Despised and disowned by friends and relatives, he is not reported missing until twenty-three years later.

Fife, Scotland, 1985. Kidnapped heiress Catriona Maclennan Grant is killed and her baby son vanishes when the ransom payoff goes horribly wrong. In 2008, a tourist in Tuscany stumbles upon dramatic new evidence that reopens the investigation.

Already immersed in the Prentice affair, Detective Karen Pirie, newly appointed head of the Cold Case Review Team, wants to make her mark with this second unsolved 1980s mystery. But two decades’ worth of secrets are leading Pirie into a dark domain of violence and betrayal—a place darker than any she has previously entered.

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  • Harper Paperbacks
  • Paperback
  • June 2010
  • 368 Pages
  • 9780061688997

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About Val McDermid

Scottish crime writer Val McDermid is the author of twenty-three novels. Her books have won the Gold Dagger Award for Best Crime Novel of the Year and the Los Angeles Times Book Prize, been named New York Times Notable Books, and been nominated for the Edgar Award. She lives in the north of England.

Praise

A Darker Domain combines a thrilling story with heartbreaking questions of social justice and history.”—Seattle Times

“As smooth a practitioner of crime fiction as anyone out there…the best we’ve got.” Time spent with her extraordinary thriller, A Darker Domain, will prove that it’s true. Set in Scotland, the milieu of Ian Rankin’s John Rebus, McDermid’s brilliant exploration of loyalty and greed intertwines the past and present. It was chosen as a New York Times Notable Crime Book of the Year and was a finalist for the Los Angeles Times Book Prize.”—New York Times

“McDermid pulls us deeply into the lives of the victims and their families. . . . Pirie is a complicated heroine made all the more appealing by her everywoman demeanor.”—USA Today

“Complex and layered plotlines come together, and McDermid does an excellent job creating tension around a cold case. Sure to be a hit with McDermid’s large fan base, it should also appeal to those who read other Scottish police mysteries.”—Booklist

Discussion Questions

The investigation into Mick Prentice’s disappearance is opened after his daughter, Misha, attempts to track down living family as a bone marrow match for her son. Would you seek out a family member who had abandoned you in order to help your child? Would you take it to the police in the way that Misha brought her search? 

The 1984 miners’ strike in Scotland was a landmark dispute in the United Kingdom. The resulting poverty for the miners and their families was often extreme. How does the strike affect the relationships described throughout the book, whether it is ties between family or friends? 

Do you sympathize with the miners that left Scotland for work in England? Do you feel the stigma attached to the wives and children left behind by those that did flee was unfair? Would you have stayed behind and waited out the strike, which would eventually come to an end after a year? 

Did Jimmy Lawson’s retelling of the night of the hand-off in the Maclennan Grant case affect your opinion of Sir Broderick or Catriona or the circumstances of the kidnapping? 

Why do you think Catriona’s mother had such a hard time handing the bag to Catriona that night? 

Knowing what he did about the circumstances of the kidnapping and the death of his mother, did you expect Gabriel / Adam to seek out his grandfather?