Hot Book of the Week – Charles Todd’s The Gate Keeper

The Hot Book of the Week at The Poisoned Pen is Charles Todd’s The Gate Keeper. The mother-and-son writing team of Caroline and Charles Todd will be at the bookstore on Monday, March 12 at 7 PM, when they’ll be interviewed by author Francine Mathews. Joining the group will be Sophie Hannah, author of Keep Her Safe. You can order a signed copy of The Gate Keeper now through the Web Store. https://bit.ly/2CYwbY1

Gate Keeper

**Exclusive for Poisoned Pen Customers with the purchase of a signed copy of The Gate Keeper, you will receive a specially designed “wedding invite”…..while supplies last**

Why a “wedding invite”? Here’s the summary of The Gate Keeper.

On a deserted road, late at night, Scotland Yard’s Ian Rutledge encounters a frightened woman standing over a body, launching an inquiry that leads him into the lair of a stealthy killer and the dangerous recesses of his own memories in this twentieth installment of the acclaimed New York Timesbestselling series.

Hours after his sister’s wedding, a restless Ian Rutledge drives aimlessly, haunted by the past, and narrowly misses a motorcar stopped in the middle of a desolate road. Standing beside the vehicle is a woman with blood on her hands and a dead man at her feet.

She swears she didn’t kill Stephen Wentworth. A stranger stepped out in front of their motorcar, and without warning, fired a single shot before vanishing into the night. But there is no trace of him. And the shaken woman insists it all happened so quickly, she never saw the man’s face.

Although he is a witness after the fact, Rutledge persuades the Yard to give him the inquiry, since he’s on the scene. But is he seeking justice—or fleeing painful memories in London?

Wentworth was well-liked, yet his bitter family paint a malevolent portrait, calling him a murderer. But who did Wentworth kill? Is his death retribution? Or has his companion lied? Wolf Pit, his village, has a notorious history: in Medieval times, the last wolf in England was killed there. When a second suspicious death occurs, the evidence suggests that a dangerous predator is on the loose, and that death is closer than Rutledge knows.