
The Fame Hotel
The death of Ollie Sincton seems at first an unpromising little murder. Who cares after all, about a fringe media character with a murky private life? But Sincton's literary bequest, a series of computer disks revealing how certain public figures had enjoyed his professional or personal attentions, changes all that.
For the police, the case has celebrity cachet - in an age of visibility, one man's murder can be another man's career break - but, among the truly powerful, the death of a ghost has acquired a more worrying significance.
In this mordantly perceptive novel nothing is clear-cut and, above all, no one is to be trusted. Except, perhaps, a policeman.
“To have writing this good, with comedy, social statement and fast-moving plot between the covers of a contemporary novel, is a rare treat”
- Daily Mail
“Compelling satire..Is Terence Blacker clairvoyant, you begin to wonder.”
- Sunday Telegraph
“A wicked story. Blacker's real strength is farce.”
- Sunday Times
“Beautifully written . a sheer delight from start to finish.”
- Books



