Image for Bean na ciotoige

Bean na ciotoige

See all formats and editions

Sceinseir dubh dorcha a le T.S. O Maoilriain a thugann o chulsraideanna suaracha na hardchathrach sinn go maru bruidiuil faoi shleasa Bhinn Eadair.Saothar bre bleachtaireachta dar a nascann caint chraicneach an iarthair le gairbhe na cathrach.

Nuair a thagann custaimir ag iarraidh air grianghraif a thgil d bhean en flagrant dlire i seomra stin, ceapann an comhairleoir slndla Sen Maoilriain go mbeidh cos an mosa aige d bharr, ach is beag sil at aige leis an gcblil, leis an striapachas, leis an mar, n leis an d chos fhada dhea-chumtha a chuireann a shaol is a intinn in aimhridh.As Baile Atha Cliath don dar seo a bhfuil lu faoi leith aige leis an Iarthar, agus le hrainn ach go hirithe.

Scolire Gaeilge a scrobhann ficsean faoin ainm cleite T.S. Maoilriain. T an t-dar ag obair faoi lthair ar scinsir nua leis an gcomhairleoir slndla Sen Maoilriain suite sa bpromhchathair agus ar chsta an Iarthair.A pitch black thriller by T.S. Maoilriain brings us from the backstreets of the capitol to a brutal murder scene on the hill of Howth.A fine piece of detective literature from an author who combines the earthy language of the west to the roughness of the city.

When a customer asks him to photograph his wife en flagrant dlire in a hotel room, security adviser Sen Maoilriain expects to be able to pay the month's rent, but little does he expect to be enmeshed in a tale of corruption, prostitution, and murder, nor is prepared for a pair of shapely legs that send his head and his life into a spin.T.

S. Maoilriain is a Dublin author, with a particular fondness for the west, and with the Aran Islands especially.

He is a scholar of Irish writing under the pen name T.

S. Maoilriain. The author is currently working on a new thriller featuring security councilor Sen Maoilriain, set in Dublin and on the Atlantic coast.

Read More
Available
£6.59
Add Line Customisation
Available on VLeBooks
Add to List
Product Details
Leabhar Breac
1909907081 / 9781909907089
eBook (EPUB)
01/01/1900
Irish
79 pages
Copy: 10%; print: 10%