Cold Sun

An utterly gripping crime thriller packed with suspense

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Pub Date 12 Aug 2021 | Archive Date 12 Aug 2021

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Description

'Wow just incredible... The killer's identity just took my breath away... Breathtaking suspense and mystery that will blow you away... Outstanding. ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐' Surjit's Book Blog⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐

In the golden afternoon light, the young woman lies perfectly still, her dark hair fanning out behind her. She is dressed in a rose red sari, shot through with gold. Just like the others.

The last time Detective Vijay Patel visited India, he vowed never to return. After a devastating accident, the country holds only bitter memories and broken dreams. But when three young women are murdered in mysterious circumstances, Patel is pulled back to his past.

Leaving his fiancée Sarah behind in London, Patel rushes to a beautiful apartment on a tree-lined street where the body of Sarita Mohan, a successful businesswoman, has been found. Floating on a sea of black satin, she is dressed in red silk, a tiny silver ring on the fourth toe of her right foot.

Desperate to find a link between the murders, Patel digs into the other cases and spots the missing link. The toe ring is a symbol of marriage and the distinctive red saris are traditionally worn for weddings. What is the killer trying to tell them? Why leave each body posed like a bride?

Then Sarah is kidnapped, and Patel is frantic to find the woman he loves before she becomes the next victim. As he desperately re-reads the killer's last cryptic message, Patel finds the critical clue he's been searching for, and hopefully a chance to save Sarah.

Determined to rescue the woman he loves, can Patel outwit the deadliest killer he has ever faced? Or is he already too late?

Utterly unputdownable, this breathless thriller will keep you guessing until the final, shocking twist. Fans of Ian Rankin, Abir Mukherjee and Val McDermid will be totally gripped!

What readers are saying about Cold Sun:

'Wow, wow, wow. I just couldn't put this one down. An absolute masterpiece. Gritty, fast paced, brilliant... Loved loved all the characters... One of the best crime books I have ever read. Just wonderful. Will be recommending this to everyone.' Bestselling author Renita D'Silva ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐

'Absolutely gripping... So intense... The twists I encountered along the way were so unexpected... I could not stop to put this down at any point... Gave me tingles... I was so nervous about how this book was going to play out.' Twilight Reader ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐

'Completely pulled in... I have devoured this book in one sitting.' Little Miss Book Lover 87

'Twisty... I didn't guess the denouement at all, even as the book was racing towards its conclusion.' The Quick and the Read

'Exciting... A super-gripping new thriller series... You'll be kept guessing as to the killer's identity throughout... Will have you totally hooked.' Cosmopolitan

'Gripping... Very well drawn characters... Recommended!' NetGalley Reviewer

'Fast-paced and riveting.' Beyond the Books

'Anita Sivakumaran is an exciting new name in crime fiction.' The Times

'Wow just incredible... The killer's identity just took my breath away... Breathtaking suspense and mystery that will blow you away... Outstanding. ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐' Surjit's Book Blog⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐

In the golden...


Available Editions

EDITION Other Format
ISBN 9780349701561
PRICE £8.99 (GBP)
PAGES 336

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Average rating from 16 members


Featured Reviews

My thoughts about Anita Sivakumaran's brilliant hard-hiting, breathtaking, Suspense Police Procedural Crime Thriller, Cold Sun was wow just incredible. Author Anita Sivakumaran not only she introduces a fantastic fearless detective Inspector, from Scotland Yard Vijay Patel, who goes to india to help the Bangolore police to catch a ruthless killer. She introduces a range of characters, that truly deserves appreciation. The story of Cold Sun is begins where we see Three high-profile women murdered, their bodies draped in identical red saris in Bangalore, the ruthless killer targets the British Foreign Minister’s ex-wife, Scotland Yard sends the troubled, brilliant DI Vijay Patel to lend his expertise to the Indian police investigation was fantastic. While in the investigation we see DI Vijay Patel team up with Chandra Subramanium, the fierce female detective he is working with in Bangalore is brilliant. Author Anita Sivakumaran has written a powerful story, that blow me away, when I found out the killer's identity just took my breath away which is incredible. Cold Sun is a well written police procedural murder mystery thriller, that has breathtaking suspense and mystery that will blow you away. A brilliant start of a great series, which is highly recommended. I would like to say thank you to Author Anita Sivakumaran, Publishers Dialogue Books and netgalley for giving me a chance to read and review this outstanding unique thriller. ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐💥💥💥💥💥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥

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A very interesting start to a gripping new series if this is anything to go by! A crime novel , and police procedural with the flavour of the UK and Bangalore mixed into one. A murder case which unravels in Bangalore and involves Scotland Yard was always going to be interesting and this is a great mix. Very well drawn characters and there's some great conversations and cultural asides here too. Recommended!

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This is the first of Anita Sivakumaran's books I've read and, I'm pleased to say, it won't be the last.
Well plotted with interesting characters, vivid description and a wonderfully rich setting, I thoroughly enjoyed reading Cold Sun.
I do find that, at times, the book can be excessively wordy and that slows the pace and the drama.
As the first in the series, I expect the rest to get better and better and look forward to reading them.

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I would like to thank Netgalley and Little, Brown Book Group UK, for an advance copy of Cold Sun, the first novel to feature DS Vijay Patel set in Bengaluru (formerly Bangalore), India.

When the former wife of the British Foreign Secretary becomes the fourth wealthy woman to be murdered in Bengaluru DS Vijay Patel is sent to India to consult with the local force. He joins forces with Assistant Commissioner Chandra Subramanium to find the killer.

I thoroughly enjoyed Cold Sun, which has a novel take on foreign detectives and a good plot that make it a fun read. It is mostly told from Patel’s point of view with the killer, who calls himself Manu, occasionally providing his thoughts. This is an interesting contrast as Manu is an unregenerate traditionalist while Patel is anything but. He is a former professional cricketer, forced to retire young through injury, turned detective, born and bred in Leicester and apart from a hotel stay for cricket has never been in India. Oh, and he doesn’t like spicy food. This throws up all sorts of questions, like why he was chosen to go, but you’ll have to read the novel to get the answers. I really like him with his ambivalence, occasional lack of motivation and ability to wholeheartedly throw himself into danger.

The plot held my attention throughout. Much of this is due to Patel’s introduction to Indian life and policing through the fiery Chandra Subramanium, a woman in a man’s world. The stereotypes keep falling in this novel. I loved the interaction between these two characters. The plot itself doesn’t offer anything new in terms of motive, or even in the strange murder weapon, but the window dressing keeps it fresh and entertaining. The only mild criticism I would have of the novel is the reveal of Manu’s identity and the final showdown. I guessed his identity about 60% in and he is revealed at 80% in. This latter is too soon as it detracts from the final action scene, which, in itself, is one of the least credible parts of the novel.

Cold Sun is a good read that I have no hesitation in recommending.

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A most interesting read set in India on the investigation into a serial killer with political and Indian religion overtones. As one of the victims is the ex-wife of a UK minister, Scotland yard gets to send a detective to India the help with the investigation. The detective being an English born Indian is viewed with mistrust which develops an interesting interplay between him, and the senior Indian officer assigned to take care of him. With high expectations and no leads, when a fourth victim a journalist that he had met is killed, it seem that it was for his benefit. This leads to a media and political frenzy, that he was no help but a liability, becoming persona non grata he must leave; at the last minute he has a brain wave that causes him to escape from taking a flight home, so to purse a last desperate attempt to crack the case. How the killer is finally identified when within a hair’s breadth of bloody disaster makes a dramatic end with reputations salvaged

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Police procedures in India are structurally similar to those in the UK, but functionally a world apart – as Detective Sergeant Vijay Patel is about to find out. Born and bred in Leicester, his parents having been part of Amin’s expulsion of Asians from Uganda, he became a star bowler for England’s Test Team. A wrist injury ended that career and he is now a DS at Scotland Yard. Having solved a major case he is feted by all – except his boss, Superintendent Skinner. In his personal life he is caught between Sarah, his long term girlfriend, and Inspector Rima, his Immediate boss with whom he is heavily ‘flirting’.
At the same time, in Bengaluru, a fanatical serial killer is using a sort of captive bolt pistol to kill, and thus ‘purify’, the rich, westernised, women he targets. This would normally have no impact on the UK except that the latest victim is the ex-wife of the Foreign Minister. Help is requested of Scotland Yard and Skinner, anticipating ignominious failure, assigns Patel as a consultant.
Arriving in Bengaluru, he quickly becomes aware that the local police hierarchy, resent his presence. This is especially so for Assistant Commissioner Chandra Subramanium , the SIO, a highly intelligent, westernised and very attractive, woman. The clash of professional cultures, and the underlying sexual frisson, provide an interesting dynamic. So too does the clash between Patel’s totally anglicised ‘Indian’ background and the reality of the real India; described in glorious detail with all its mess, and colour, and noise and smells.
In some respects this is a slow build story as Vijay and Chandra become settled as a team and try to identify the killer. As it progresses, the action speeds up as we head towards the action packed denouement. The writer shows considerable skill in assembling and relating her tale, as she here takes off in a surprising direction – very different from her previous works of history and poetry. Although all is resolved, there is a feeling that Patel, as a character, has a lot left to develop and I wouldn’t be surprised if this becomes the start of a series.
I would like to thank NetGalley, the publishers and the author for providing me with a draft proof copy for the purpose of this review.
Police procedures in India are structurally similar to those in the UK, but functionally a world apart – as Detective Sergeant Vijay Patel is about to find out. Born and bred in Leicester, his parents having been part of Amin’s expulsion of Asians from Uganda, he became a star bowler for England’s Test Team. A wrist injury ended that career and he is now a DS at Scotland Yard. Having solved a major case he is feted by all – except his boss, Superintendent Skinner. In his personal life he is caught between Sarah, his long term girlfriend, and Inspector Rima, his Immediate boss with whom he is heavily ‘flirting’.
At the same time, in Bengaluru, a fanatical serial killer is using a sort of captive bolt pistol to kill, and thus ‘purify’, the rich, westernised, women he targets. This would normally have no impact on the UK except that the latest victim is the ex-wife of the Foreign Secretary. Help is requested of Scotland Yard and Skinner, anticipating ignominious failure, assigns Patel as a consultant.
Arriving in Bengaluru, he quickly becomes aware that the local police hierarchy, resent his presence. This is especially so for Assistant Commissioner Chandra Subramanium , the SIO, a highly intelligent, westernised and very attractive, woman. The clash of professional cultures, and the underlying sexual frisson, provide an interesting dynamic. So too does the clash between Patel’s totally anglicised ‘Indian’ background and the reality of the real India; described in glorious detail with all its mess, and colour, and noise and smells.
In some respects this is a slow build story as Vijay and Chandra become settled as a team and try to identify the killer. As it progresses, the action speeds up as we head towards the action packed denouement. The writer shows considerable skill in assembling and relating her tale, as she here takes off in a surprising direction – very different from her previous works of history and poetry. Although all is resolved, there is a feeling that Patel, as a character, has a lot left to develop and I wouldn’t be surprised if this becomes the start of a series.
I would like to thank NetGalley, the publishers and the author for providing me with a draft proof copy for the purpose of this review.

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This is the first in what appears to be a new series by Anita Sivakumaran featuring the fish out of water DS Vijay Patel, sent to Bangalore in India by a Superintendent Skinner of the London Met who is not keen on him. Patel's family are from Uganda, and he is a Leicester man who ended up playing cricket as a fast bowler for the England team, only to be forced to retire after a wrist injury. After this, he retrained as a police officer, who in Yorkshire struck lucky when he was responsible for catching a serial killer. He knows he got a lucky break, but it means he shoulders heavy responsibilities and burdens with the high expectations of his talents, the reasons why he is chosen to help the Indian police in a case that has seen prominent women murdered, dressed in red saris, and killed with a rather unusual weapon.

However, his troubled personal life, he is engaged to artist and sculptor Sarah Saunders, means that he is not entirely unhappy to be travelling to the sub-continent. The British interest is that the Foreign Secretary, Alex Goldblum's ex-wife, the 34 year old Sarita Mohan is one of the victims. As can be imagined, not everyone in the Indian police force is keen on his arrival, but Police Chief Rajkumar is under heavy pressure to make an arrest. With his role identified as a consultant, Patel works closely with Assistant Commissioner Chandra Subramanium, a tough woman who has had to survive in a profession that is heavily male dominated. He finds himself part of a murder inquiry where there are no leads, unable to speak the language and a colourful vibrant culture he is unfamilar with, and a spicy cuisine that he is struggling to stomach. He is helped back in London by Inspector Rima Seth.

Patel finds himself being the intense focus of the media, but the murders continue at a faster rate, and he has caught the eye of the killer, Manu, a unreconstructed man who has traditional ideas on the role of women and how they should behave. This is an entertaining crime read primarily for its great sense of location in India and the great character of Chandra. It is marred slightly by the identity of Manu being far too easy to decipher early on, but otherwise this a good crime mystery, although I am wondering where the author will take Patel on his next outing. Many thanks to the publisher for an ARC.

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Cold Sun is the first instalment in the Detective Vijay Patel series, set against the backdrop of searingly hot Bengaluru (previously known as Bangalore) in the state of Karnataka, where high tech industry thrives and the city erupts with energetic nightlife and the greenery and scenery of its parks. This is a richly atmospheric amalgamation of crime thriller, police procedural and Bollywood Noir. DS Vijay Patel is the Leicester-born son of Gujarati immigrants. A first-class cricketer, whose England career was ended abruptly by injury, now works as a Detective Sergeant at Scotland Yard. Brilliant, but lacking confidence, and with a crumbling personal life, he’s sent to Bangalore to assist in the investigation of the murder of several high-profile, glamorous women, one of whom is the British Foreign Minister’s ex-wife. The only clues from the killer, who calls himself ‘Gentleman’, are the mysterious weapon that delivers the killing blow and the identical red saris he leaves draped on the bodies of all the women. Patel is a stranger in a strange land - though one who looks like a local.

He must work with Assistant Commissioner Chandra Subramanium, a dynamic, ruthless Indian policewoman who resents the British intrusion. With differing methods and near-fatal results, together they must hunt the psychopath killer, before he takes another life. This is a compulsive, captivating and fast-paced thriller in which debut genre author Sivakumaran weaves a richly described and intriguing story full of drama, wonderful insights into Indian culture and a cast of distinctive and engaging characters. The location is a character in itself and brings such a lot of intrigue to the novel with the lush descriptions of the sights, sounds and smells of the bustling city. Primarily told from Patel’s perspective with some interspersed musings of the killer, Maru, I found it fresh, exciting and thoroughly entertaining; it had no problem capturing my interest from start to finish. Patel is impulsive, determined and ambivalent, and the dynamic between Chandra and Patel is a fascinating one. I can't wait to see what direction the series will head in when Black Rain arrives in 2022. Highly recommended.

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A crime novel , and police procedural with the flavour of the UK and Bangalore mixed into one. A gripping read that I recommend.

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This is the first in a very promising series featuring Scotland Yard detective Vijay Patel, former cricketer and rising star. When a series of murders in Bangalore baffle the local police, one of the victims being the wife of an English politician, Patel is seconded to India to advise. The novel is greatly enhanced by the author's knowledge of local geography and customs and the plot is fascinating throughout, with a number of surprising revelations. I look forward to the next in the series.

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Cold Sun by Anita Sivakumaran is a scintillating #whodunnit releasing on 12th August.

Deeply grateful to #netgalley #littlebrown for this #ARC.

DS Vijay Patel, a once famous cricketer from Leicester, born to Gujarati parents from Uganda has a penchant for cracking crime like Sherlock Holmes. He naturally gravitated to criminology, joined Scotland Yard after he sustained a permanent injury that ousted him from his cricketing career.

He goes on a stint to Bengaluru, pairs with a femme fatale Assistant Commissioner Chandra in hunting down a psychopathic serial killer. I will not ruin the suspense for you. You do the #whodunnit homework yourself when you read this book.

Killer's agenda: A megalomaniac (hindutva), also anglophillic with a puritanical ambition to cleanse the womanhood from all our sins such as smoking, drinking, whoring and her matching clothing. Uncle "transforms" the sinner woman to become righteous and pure in her afterlife by delivering the instantaneous death blow. There's the tunnel-visioned Hindu red bindi connotation - righteous god-fearing women sporting the symbol on the forehead. He drapes a red saree with a matching red blouse on all his victims. Red for fire / purification. Because uncle considers himself as the "Manu Purush".
(I'd sponsor the kerosense all by myself if batches of real life uncle and aunty Purush can be annihilated.)

Vijay finds himself in a conundrum. He follows the traditional Scotland Yard police procedural and CSI while Chandra begged to differ by deploying the infamous Indian Policing method.

I'm so captivated by Anita Sivakumaran's writing and mental presence in this story. The plot's trajectory or the foreshadowing took off from the 4th chapter onwards. Anita's knowledge of the arts, poem, geography incorporated with delectable slangs of British, Welsh, Aussie, and even my very own Tamil were works of brilliance. A worldly-crime outfit. Chandra's sardonic wit complimented Vijay's wry humour. And Anita has brilliantly distinguished the individual narratives.

Crime writing requires a special intellect and sharp sensibilities. Cold sun fulfills the sightscape, soundscape sensualities, the psychological schema of a criminal, the crescendo in tension kept me on edge the whole night. The face off between the criminal and his alter-ego - the detective was a smooth finishing.

There's speed, method, mental agility and almost watertight in this case of #whodunnit . The undercurrents of political and social perfectly layered the crime atmosphere. Also, there's the "No Country For Old Men" cameo!

A monumental crime story. Take a bow, Anita. Here's to many more of the #crimebusters duo, Vijay Patel and Chandra. Faith in crime stories is restored. I slept contentedly last night after devouring the Cold Sun. 

5 stars 🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟

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