Praise for SUFFER THE CHILDREN:
London’s answer to The Wire
- INDEPENDENT
Christmas is coming and DI Staffe is trying to make a go of it with his on-off girlfriend, Sylvie, when a murdered woman is discovered in a swanky City hotel room.
Staffe becomes obsessed with Elena Danya, the dead, blonde and beguiling, high-end prostitute. When another, altogether more down-at-heel working girl is killed, and their mutual aristocratic friend and bad-girl, Arabella, goes missing, Staffe is drawn into the whole gamut of London’s alien niches: brothels and gentlemen’s clubs; banks and tenement estates.
The evidence begins to point to a coy sociopath and voyeuristic predator, Graham Blears, but Staffe is not convinced and is increasingly drawn away from the city and towards the roots of a tangled ménage of City banker, Russian oligarch, and Turkish playboy, forcing himself down into the higher echelons of the British establishment, whose barricades begin to stonewall the investigation.
When his Chief, Pennington, cuts him loose, Staffe becomes the hunted instead of the hunter, with grave consequences for the women who are close to him.
Now in his early forties, Adam Creed founded the ‘Free to Write’ programme, which teaches creative writing within prisons and also to ex-offenders across England. His experience of working with prisoners and probation officers has proven immensely useful for the series of crime novels which he is now writing for Faber & Faber. Adam Creed is now also the head of the Creative Writing MA programme at Liverpool John Moores University.