In his old house in uptown New Orleans, Lew Griffin is alone again…or almost. He and Deborah are drifting apart. His son David has disappeared again, leaving behind a note that sounds final. Heading homeward from his retirement party, his friend, Don Walsh has been shot while interrupting a robbery. Worst of all, Lew himself is directionless, no longer teaching, with little to fill his days. He hasn’t written anything in years. Even the attempt to discover the source of threatening letters sent to a friend leaves him feeling rootless and lost.
And now Lew Griffin stands alone in a dark room, looking out. Behind him on the bed is a body. Wind pecks at the window. Traffic sounds drift aimlessly in. He thinks if he doesn’t speak, doesn’t think about what happened, somehow things will be alright again. He thinks about his own life, about the other’s, about how the two of them came to be here…
In a series as much about identity as it is about crime, Sallis has held a mirror up to society and culture, while at the same time setting Lew Griffin the task of discovering who he is. As the detective stands in that dark room, the answers begin to come clear and the highly acclaimed series builds to a brilliantly constructed climax that will resonate in readers’ minds long after the story is finished.
Category: Crime and mystery fiction
RRP: £14.99
ISBN: 9781842430415
Published: December 6, 2001
Extent: 224 pages
RRP: £7.99
ISBN: 9781901982954
Published: January 10, 2002
Extent: 224 pages
RRP: £4.99
ISBN: 9781842437186
Published: May 10, 2012
‘Ghost of a Flea bears the marks of a fierce and original writer working at full power.’
Kai Maristead , L.A. Times
‘His writing is literate, intelligent, deeply moving, his exploration of what it is to be human is incisive, heartbreaking yet ultimately uplifting. Ghost Of A Flea is a book that you don’t want to finish and you can’t put down’
Cath Staincliffe , Manchester Evening News
‘Allusive and stylish, this stark metaphysical landscape will leave a resounding impression’
Maxim Jakubowski , Guardian
‘With Ghost of a Flea, the sixth and last Griffin novel, Sallis brings things to closure and, with a stunning flourish, transfigures everything that came before into an ingenious, resonant whole’
Gene Seymour , newsday.com