David Peace grew up in Yorkshire in the '70's and vividly remembers listening to the hoax tape of the Yorkshire Ripper on his way home from school. He was selected as one of Granta's Best of Young British Novelists 2003. In 2007, he was named GQ Writer of the Year. He lives in Japan.
Haunting evocations of 70s and 80s Yorkshire - interlinking tales of very fallible coppers, very noir hacks, very human killers * Observer * 1974 is raw and furiously alive, the literary equivalent of a hard right to the jaw -- George P. Pelecanos Quite simply, this is the future of British crime fiction * Time Out * Stunning...a brilliant first novel, written with tremendous pace and passion * Yorkshire Post * A brilliant, unique voice -- John Simm Peace has found his own voice - full of dazzling, intense poetry and visceral violence * Uncut * The slow-burning, word-of-mouth success story of British publishing... These four books recreated the pervasive sense of terror and corruption with a hammering, semi-magical style loosely reminiscent of James Ellroy, but steeped in something far more bleak and English... the evil twin of Life On Mars... Peace may have succeeded in creating an enduring literature for a curiously undocumented area of Britain * Guardian * Bleakly brilliant * Radio Times * Compelling * Sunday Times * He's in a class of his own in terms of ambition. He's trying to write these alternative histories of events we know quite well in a challenging way. The fact that he's dealing with very English subjects from Japan is very interesting -- Editor of Granta Magazine A British crime master work. Required reading... * Maxim * Original, difficult, brilliant * Observer * Singular and memorable * Guardian *