Death and the city


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​”The deaths say a lot about the value we tend to put on different lives and our attitudes toward celebrity and the media,” says Sarah Bailey about her second book, the follow up to bestselling The Dark Lake.


Detective Sergeant Gemma Woodstock, 32, is back on the case but she’s left her small home town for the hard lights of Melbourne. Soon she’s investigating two very different deaths: one old, one young; one murdered at night, the other in daylight; one unwanted and street soiled, the other famous and adored. Are these stabbing attacks random or premeditated? Is there a connection between them despite the disparate nature of the victims?


Sarah Bailey tips more growing for Detective Sergeant Gemma Woodstock in subsequent books.

Sarah Bailey tips more growing for Detective Sergeant Gemma Woodstock in subsequent books.


Photo: Supplied

Like her debut, Into the Night is a balance between a police procedural, with the usual staffing quirks and idiosyncrasies, and Gemma’s personal life. Living and working in the CBD, she finds its bustling anonymity bewildering, and yet comforting.


Bailey dedicated her first book to her children, but decided Into the Night – a (bloody) love letter to Melbourne – was too risque to serve as a personal tribute to her parents.


Into the Night. By Sarah Bailey.

Into the Night. By Sarah Bailey.


Photo: Supplied

Article source: https://www.watoday.com.au/national/science-a-strange-omission-from-ramsay-centre-s-study-of-the-west-20180625-p4znix.html?utm_medium=rss&utm_source=rss_feed

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