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DISCOVER YOUR NEXT FAVOURITE SERIES. MEET BRITAIN'S BEST-LOVED VILLAGE POLICEMAN. Perfect for fans of James Herriot, T.E. Kinsey, Gerald Durrell, J.R. Ellis or anyone who loves a great read. "It's original, it's funny . . . one of life's little pleasures." Yorkshire Post Constable Nick has his sights set on a promotion. But what if that means leaving his happy moorland home behind? As Nick ponders this dilemma, village life continues apace. What with kids skipping school and calamity at the river's edge - when clueless twin artists Prudence and Priscilla drive their car into the water -…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
DISCOVER YOUR NEXT FAVOURITE SERIES. MEET BRITAIN'S BEST-LOVED VILLAGE POLICEMAN. Perfect for fans of James Herriot, T.E. Kinsey, Gerald Durrell, J.R. Ellis or anyone who loves a great read. "It's original, it's funny . . . one of life's little pleasures." Yorkshire Post Constable Nick has his sights set on a promotion. But what if that means leaving his happy moorland home behind? As Nick ponders this dilemma, village life continues apace. What with kids skipping school and calamity at the river's edge - when clueless twin artists Prudence and Priscilla drive their car into the water - there's never a dull moment on the Aidensfield beat. Whenever there's a Greengrass-related riot to be quelled or a stubborn Pyrenean Mountain dog to be cajoled, the villagers will always turn to Constable Nick to put things right. How will they get by without their dependable local bobby? The brilliantly entertaining and heartwarming books behind the hit 90s TV series Heartbeat. One of the top ten most watched shows of the decade. "Stories of a constable on his village beat in North Yorkshire. All very gentle and far, far removed from the hurly burly of modern-day city policing." Daily Telegraph DISCOVER ONE OF BRITAIN'S BEST-LOVED AUTHORS
Autorenporträt
Author Nicholas Rhea (the pseudonym of Peter Walker) drew on his own experiences as a local bobby for a small Yorkshire village in the 1960s to chronicle the career of Constable Nick, from his first arrival in Aidensfield in Constable on the Hill through his years on his rural beat, to his retirement in Constable over the Hill. In 2007, he was given the Crime Writers' Association's John Creasey Award (named after the CWA founder) for services to the association. By his death in 2017, he had written over 110 books, using as many as five pseudonyms, and had become one of the north's most prolific writers.