![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() That perspective somehow (for me) feels less of a chore to get through. I find anything written in first person perspective is just so easy to read and flows well. The Straight Razor Cure is one of those books that a couple of pages in I just knew I was going to love it. My Rating of ‘The Straight Razor Cure’: 5 out of 5 With a mind as sharp as a blade and an old but powerful friend in the city, he’s the only man with a hope of finding the killer. But then a missing child, murdered and horribly mutilated, is discovered in an alley. You’d struggle to find someone with a soul as dark and troubled as his. Warden is an ex-soldier who has seen the worst men have to offer now a narcotics dealer with a rich, bloody past and a way of inviting danger. Here, people can disappear, and the lacklustre efforts of the guard ensure they are never found. The streets are filled with the screeching of fish hags, the cries of swindled merchants, the inviting murmurs of working girls. ![]()
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