Showing posts with label DCI Nick Dixon. Show all posts
Showing posts with label DCI Nick Dixon. Show all posts

Monday, June 30, 2025

"Blue Blood" by Damien Boyd


Acting Detective Inspector Superintendent Nick Dixon of the Avon and Somerset Police has a lot on his mind. It’s his wedding day; his wife-to-be, Detective Sergeant Jane Winters, is seven months pregnant. The wedding goes as planned, but that’s about all that goes as planned. A knock at his door that night is from his boss. A body has been found in the bay, and it’s a serving police officer. His partner is missing. Wedding day or not, Dixon has to deal with the case. 

Another case is added; two drug dealers had been found weeks earlier tortured and then killed. The dead and missing officers were involved. What ties the two cases together is the still-missing murder weapon – a 3D printed gun.

 

Adding to the threats of other deaths and someone printing guns is the investigation keeps leading the team back to the police. And Dixon has to cut through deceit, lies, and possible corruption to get to the truth.

 

Damien Boyd

Blue Blood
 is the 15th Nick Dixon crime novel by British writer Damien Boyd, and it’s a thriller of a story. Boyd is a master at riveting the reader’s attention, bringing the novel to a fever-pitch close. 

 

Boyd uses his own experience as a legal solicitor and a member of the Crown Prosecution Service to frame his stories. And that knowledge and experience is telling. He understands how policemen do their work, how prosecutions operate, and what happens when a former tax lawyer (Dixon) brings his very unorthodox thinking to police work. 

 

Blue Blood keeps you guessing right up to the end, and not only who the killer is but also whether some of the good guys and innocent bystanders will survive. And it’s a “I have to get up and walk around” ending.

 

Related:

My review of Damien Boyd’s As the Crow Flies.

My review of Damien Boyd’s Head in the Sand.

My review of Damien Boyd’s Kickback.

My review of Damien Boyd’s Swansong.

My review of Damien Boyd's Dead Level.

My review of Damien Boyd’s Death Sentence.

My review of Damien Boyd’s Heads or Tails.

My review of Damien Boyd’s Dead Lock.

My review of Damien Boyd’s Beyond the Point.

My review of Down Among the Dead by Damien Boyd.

My review of Dying Inside by Damien Boyd.

 My review of Carnival Blues by Damien Boyd.

My review of Death Message by Damien Boyd

My reveiw of From the Ashes by Damien Boyd.

Some Monday Readings

Winter and Summer on the Farm – Brian Miller at Notes from an East Tennessee Farmer.

 

Russian Roulette – Dominic Green at The Lamp on Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn’s Red Wheel.

 

London’s Wonderful East End – Spitalfields Life. 

‘Endurance Comes Only From Enduring’ – Cynthia Haven at The Free Press on Czeslaw Milosz.

Thursday, June 20, 2024

"From the Ashes" by Damien Boyd


An elderly widow has been found dead in her home. The attending doctor diagnoses natural causes, but a rather clever young policewoman tells her partner that they’re to report any death of an elderly person, according to a note on the Avon and Somerset Police Department’s intranet. They do, and soon enough, Detective Chief Inspector Nick Dixon visits the scene. And he quickly sees that the woman has been strangled.  

A similar case had been reported in a neighboring police jurisdiction, that of an elderly man initially believed to have died of natural causes. It turned out that he, too, had been strangled. A regional task force is created, and Dixon is made an Acting Superintendent so that Avon and Somerset can keep control.

 

Both victims were teachers from the same seaside community. They taught at different schools but likely knew each other. But Dixon and his team, which includes his partner Jane Winters now six-months pregnant with their child, can’t find anything else that might be a connecting point or a reason for their deaths. That is, until there’s a third murder, and a chance remark leads to the first breakthrough in the case.

 

Damien Boyd

The victims played for the same bridge club team. And, 20 years before, they were all in Torquay for a tournament the night the tournament hotel burned down, killing three people. And it’s that discovery from which Dixon moves the investigation forward. 

 

From the Ashes is the 14th DCI Nick Dixon mystery by British writer Damien Boyd, and it’s a clear winner in the series. Boyd keeps Dixon (and the reader) guessing as he builds the tension and then brings the story together in a thrilling conclusion.

 

Boyd uses his own experience as a legal solicitor and a member of the Crown Prosecution Service to frame his stories. And that knowledge and experience is telling. He understands how policemen do their work, how prosecutions operate, and what happens when a former tax lawyer (Dixon) brings his very unorthodox thinking to police work. 

 

Boyd has to do a 15th entry in the series; we want to find out about Nick and Jane’s wedding, the baby, the politics at police headquarters. And we want another cracking good tale.

 

Related:


My review of Damien Boyd’s As the Crow Flies
.

 

My review of Damien Boyd’s Head in the Sand.

 

My review of Damien Boyd’s Kickback.

 

My review of Damien Boyd’s Swansong.


My review of Damien Boyd's Dead Level.

 

My review of Damien Boyd’s Death Sentence.

 

My review of Damien Boyd’s Heads or Tails.

 

My review of Damien Boyd’s Dead Lock.

 

My review of Damien Boyd’s Beyond the Point.

 

My review of Down Among the Dead by Damien Boyd.

 

My review of Dying Inside by Damien Boyd.

 

My review of Carnival Blues by Damien Boyd.

 

My review of Death Message by Damien Boyd

 

Some Thursday Readings

 

Nicholas Kristoff tries to figure out who destroyed the West Coast – Stephen Miller at The Spectator.

 

Yesterday’s Men: The death of the mythical method – Alan Jacobs at Harper’s Magazine.

 

The odd couple: Evelyn Waugh and Graham Greene – Jeffrey Meyers at The Critic Magazine.

 

Red Marks, a Dark Teesside short story by Glenn McGoldrick, is free on Amazon today.

 

What Comes After Liberalism? – John Horvat at The Imaginative Conservative. 

Thursday, July 13, 2023

"Death Message" by Damien Boyd


Detective Chief Inspector Nick Dixon of the Avon and Somerset Police is considering leaving the force. In fact, he’s interviewing for jobs with law firms; he is a licensed attorney, after all, and he’s had it with the police. During his last case, the internal police watchdogs arrested him for murder and pitched him into a jail cell. It was a stitch-up, and Dixon was eventually cleared, but the experience has left a bitter taste. And no one has apologized. 

In the meantime, a new murder case has emerged. Parts of a body have been discovered in a river, and they turn out to belong to a private investigator who was formerly a police officer – and an officer with a penchant for manufacturing evidence. The former cop specialized in staking out plaintiffs suing for workplace injury compensation. Dixon’s fiancée and fellow officer Jane Winters is temporarily in charge, working for Dixon’s boss while Dixon himself is still on leave.

 

As the police probe what the former cop had been doing before his death, they discover what at first appears to be an unrelated mystery. An art student died, presumably a suicide with an insulin overdose. Dixon, a diabetic himself, suspects otherwise, convinces the coroner to adjourn the hearing with a verdict, and is back in the saddle as a DCI. And what he focuses on is that the former police officer was staking out a plaintiff who lived next door to the dead art student, and he disappeared the day of the girl’s funeral. And somehow all of this seems tied to a mystery street artist named Van Gard, whose spray paintings sell for hundreds of thousands of pounds (this an artist like Banksy). 

 

Damien Boyd

And then more deaths occur.

 

Death Message is the 13th mystery novel in the Nick Dixon series by British author Damien Boyd, and it’s a crackerjack of a story. The riveting story wraps old crimes and new crimes so closely together, with so many twists and turns, that it takes the reader on a wild, and ultimately satisfying, rollercoaster ride. 

 

Boyd uses his own experience as a legal solicitor and a member of the Crown Prosecution Service to frame his stories, and then infuses considerable research in just the right way. In the novels, Dixon had been a promising young barrister, until he chucked it all and joined the police. As it is, he’s one of the youngest detective inspectors in the Avon and Somerset police force; he’s also the most brilliant at solving cases which look unsolvable. 

 

Related:


My review of Damien Boyd’s As the Crow Flies
.

 

My review of Damien Boyd’s Head in the Sand.

 

My review of Damien Boyd’s Kickback.

 

My review of Damien Boyd’s Swansong.


My review of Damien Boyd's Dead Level.

 

My review of Damien Boyd’s Death Sentence.

 

My review of Damien Boyd’s Heads or Tails.

 

My review of Damien Boyd’s Dead Lock.

 

My review of Damien Boyd’s Beyond the Point.

 

My review of Down Among the Dead by Damien Boyd.

 

My review of Dying Inside by Damien Boyd.

 

My review of Carnival Blues by Damien Boyd.


Some Thursday Readings


On trial for a question – Päivi Räsänen at The Spectator.

Thursday, July 21, 2022

"Carnival Blues" by Damien Boyd


The Somerset Carnivals are the largest illuminated processions in the world. Detective Chief Inspector Nick Dixon of the Avon and Somerset is meeting his pregnant wife-to-be, Detective Sergeant Jane Winter, and good friend the coroner, Dr. Roger Poland. He arrives almost too late; a good part of the procession in Bridgewater has already paraded.  

Then comes the procession of a small carnival club, with members carrying squibs, fireworks attached to broom-like devices. One of the club members ignites his and is suddenly engulfed in flames, right in front of Dixon and his party. Dixon uses his coat to smother the flames; the man survives but is badly burned.

 

As it turns out, this was attempted murder; an accelerant was used. The man is an estate agent (what Americans would call a real estate agent). As Dixon and his police team investigate, they discover the victim was involved in a number of shady deals that cheated landowners – and providing a lengthy list of suspects. A second agent is killed, and a third disappears. Just as the police are making headway, Dixon is suspended, pending an investigation that he may have actually murdered a criminal who’d invaded his home. (It may sound like a case of arresting the victim that happens in places like New York City.)

 

Damien Boyd

But this is DCI Nick Dixon, and he’s not going to let something like an Internal Affairs review get in his way of solving the crimes.

 

Carnival Blues is the 12th mystery in the DCI Nick Dixon series by British author Damien Boyd, and it bears all the trademarks of its predecessors – solid plotting, thrilling episodes, and police bureaucrats who seem more interested in stopping than helping investigations.

 

Boyd uses his own experience as a legal solicitor and a member of the Crown Prosecution Service to frame his stories, and then infuses considerable research in just the right way. In the novels, Dixon had been a promising young barrister, until he chucked it all and joined the police. As it is, he’s one of the youngest detective inspectors in the Avon and Somerset police force; he’s also the most brilliant at solving cases which look unsolvable. 

 

Carnival Blues is one entertaining mystery.

 

Related:


My review of Damien Boyd’s As the Crow Flies
.

 

My review of Damien Boyd’s Head in the Sand.

 

My review of Damien Boyd’s Kickback.

 

My review of Damien Boyd’s Swansong.


My review of Damien Boyd's Dead Level.

 

My review of Damien Boyd’s Death Sentence.

 

My review of Damien Boyd’s Heads or Tails.

 

My review of Damien Boyd’s Dead Lock.

 

My review of Damien Boyd’s Beyond the Point.

 

My review of Down Among the Dead by Damien Boyd.

 

My review of Dying Inside by Damien Boyd.