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Marshall Grade

Cette série plonge les lecteurs dans le monde brut d'un protagoniste complexe, pris entre le devoir et ses démons personnels. Il navigue à travers de dangereuses opérations d'infiltration et affronte les bas-fonds violents du crime organisé, tout en luttant contre le tumulte intérieur et un passé troublé. Chaque épisode offre un mélange implacable d'action à enjeux élevés, d'ambiguïté morale et une recherche incessante de justice, même au prix d'un grand coût personnel. C'est une lecture incontournable pour les fans de thrillers sombres mettant en scène des héros hantés et compétents.

Marshall's Law
American Blood

Ordre de lecture recommandé

  1. American Blood

    • 344pages
    • 13 heures de lecture

    In Ben Sanders's American Blood, a former undercover cop now in witness protection finds himself pulled into the search for a missing woman; film rights sold to Warner Bros with Bradley Cooper attached to star and produce. After a botched undercover operation, ex-NYPD officer Marshall Grade is living in witness protection in Santa Fe, New Mexico. Marshall's instructions are to keep a low profile: the mob wants him dead, and a contract killer known as the Dallas Man has been hired to track him down. Racked with guilt over wrongs committed during his undercover work, and seeking atonement, Marshall investigates the disappearance of a local woman named Alyce Ray. Members of a drug ring seem to hold clues to Ray's whereabouts, but hunting traffickers is no quiet task. Word of Marshall's efforts spreads, and soon the worst elements of his former life, including the Dallas Man, are coming for him. Written by a rising New Zealand star who has been described as "first rate," this American debut drops a Jack Reacher-like hero into the landscape of No Country for Old Men .

    American Blood1
    3,4
  2. Marshall's Law

    • 340pages
    • 12 heures de lecture

    Ex-undercover cop Marshall Grade is hiding out in California when he learns that federal agent Lucas Cohen has survived a kidnapping. Cohen was Marshall's ticket into witness protection, and his captors have a simple question: where's Marshall now?

    Marshall's Law2
    3,6