
My Review (4 stars out of 5)
Detectives Foxe and Kennard feel like a couple of spare parts at Moat Lane Police Station, especially when they find themselves tasked with investigating a series of burglaries, rather than what they really want – a nice juicy murder. But the investigation takes an unexpected turn, throwing them into a sticky mess of corruption and deceit…
This is the first book in the Foxe and Kennard series, and the first I’ve read by this author. I really liked the relationship between the two protagonists as they band together against their not-so-friendly colleagues. The story is a good one, with some nice plot twists. Having said that, I felt it took a while to get going and there was a little too much dialogue for my liking. More action would’ve carried the plot forward quicker.
A clever and entertaining police procedural.
Purchase Links
Author Bio

Paul Gitsham is the author of the Foxe and Kennard British detective series, the DCI Warren Jones series and the standalone domestic thriller, The Aftermath.
Brought up in Coventry, he started his career as a biologist. After gaining a PhD in molecular biology, he worked in laboratories in Manchester and Toronto, before retraining as a science teacher. Along the way he had spells as the world’s most over-qualified receptionist and spent time working for a major UK bank, ensuring that terrorists, foreign dictators and other international ne’er do wells hadn’t embarrassed the institution by managing to deposit their ill-gotten gains in a Children’s Trust Fund.
Paul’s final school reports from primary school said that he would never achieve anything if his handwriting didn’t improve. A somewhat kinder note urged him to become the next Roald Dahl. If anything, his handwriting has got worse and unless Mr Dahl also wrote police procedurals under a pseudonym, he has failed on both counts.
Paul is a member of the Crime Writers Association and the International Thriller Writers organisation and lives with his wife in the West Midlands in a house with more books than shelf space.
Social Media Links
Instagram/Threads @paulgitsham
Facebook@dcijones (Appears as Paul Gitsham Author)
X/Twitter @dcijoneswriter
NB This post first appeared on the Blog Tour for Deadly Truths, via Rachel at Rachel’s Random Resources

Hi Colin, this is an interesting review. I quite like police investigation books. Your comment about dialogue is what I think too. Many modern authors are very dialogue heavy.
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Thanks, Robbie – your comments are always appreciated.
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