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The Necessary Death of Lewis Winter (The Glasgow Trilogy Book 1) Kindle Edition

4.1 out of 5 stars 1,063 ratings

Winner of the ITV3 Crime Thriller Book Club Best Read Award.
Shortlisted for the CWA John Creasey Dagger for Best Debut Crime Novel of the Year and the Saltire Scottish First Book of the Year Award.
Longlisted for the CWA Ian Fleming Steel Dagger for Best Thriller of the Year and the Theakston's Crime Novel of the Year Award.

A twenty-nine-year-old man lives alone in his Glasgow flat. The telephone rings; a casual conversation, but behind this a job offer. The clues are there if you know to look for them.

He is an expert. A loner. Freelance. Another job is another job, but what if this organization wants more?

A meeting at a club. An offer. A brief. A target: Lewis Winter.

It's hard to kill a man well. People who do it well know this. People who do it badly find out the hard way. The hard way has consequences.

An arresting, gripping novel of dark relationships and even darker moralities,
The Necessary Death of Lewis Winter introduces a remarkable voice in crime fiction.

Malcolm Mackay's award-winning The Glasgow Trilogy continues in
How A Gunman Says Goodbye and The Sudden Arrival of Violence.

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 See full series
There are 6 books in this series.
1 unreleased or unavailable book is excluded.

Product description

Review

'Cool, laconic and very enjoyable. I look forward eagerly to the second novel in the trilogy' Allan Massie 'A very auspicious debut, this is an amazing novel, incredibly gripping from the first page to the last. A vivid portrait of the Glasgow underworld, it's completely hypnotic ... like the great writers, people like Elmore Leonard, Mackay paints really vivid portraits of his characters ... a really unique voice' Mark Billingham 'A really clever multi-viewpoint novel about the Glasgow underworld ... The Necessary Death of Lewis Winter was a real revelation, a real find for me' Kate Mosse 'A dark, rich, brutal thriller ... it absolutely captivates you. The Necessary Death of Lewis Winter is more than a page turner, it's a page ripper. For a debut novel this sparkles, this zings, it leaps off the page. If you like Ian Rankin, if you like Stuart MacBride, if you like Val McDermid, Denise Mina - Malcolm Mackay is right up there' Peter James 'Glasgow's a tough city and this is a tough book ... very authentic, very gritty, you can really feel the streets. They call this genre Tartan Noir and absolutely The Necessary Death of Lewis Winter is a first class member of that' Lee Child 'I finished it almost in a sitting. The prose is spare and taut and pulls the reader into the minds of the disparate characters ... beautifully and truthfully written with the deceptive simplicity of a fine short story' Ann Cleeves, creator of VERA 'A remarkably original debut ... this is a book that it would be hard not to finish in one sitting ... a wholly believable and unnerving portrait of organised crime' Observer 'The debut writer who is being hailed as tartan noir's most authoritative and authentic new voice ... Mackay writes in a tough-guy style that is reminiscent of Raymond Chandler and Dashiell Hammett at their most hard-boiled' Scotsman 'Brutal, witty and well-written ... a brilliant debut' Sunday Telegraph 'On the evidence of his impressive debut Malcolm Mackay will no doubt be hailed as the newest member of the Tartan Noir community. Yet the feel and style of The Necessary Death of Lewis Winter is more American than Scottish ... a quietly absorbing gangland tale, full of moral ambiguities' Marcel Berlins, The Times 'The remarkable first book of a trilogy about Glasgow hit-man Calum MacLean, which will be published over the next year, this marks the debut of 31-year-old Mackay from Stornoway in the Outer Hebrides ... His achievement is all the more stunning because drawing on his sublime imagination and innate empathy he has created a cast of characters so vivid - especially MacLean, who knows how hard it is to kill a man - that they live on in the memory long after the final page. There are Glasgow villains, bent policemen, a gangster's moll with smarts to die for, not to mention the shabby drug-dealer Lewis Winter who has to die ... 'tartan noir' will have a new star' Daily Mail 'From the outset Mackay's debut makes it clear he has ambitions for this work that don't fit the mould ... The first of a trilogy, The Necessary Death Of Lewis Winter would seem to take its inspiration less from Scottish noir antecedents, and more from American TV series such as Dexter, The Sopranos or Breaking Bad ... impressively controlled and confident debut ... The Necessary Death Of Lewis Winter is unexpectedly compelling. Mackay knows how to pace a story related in a matter-of-fact manner that, in less assured hands, would become suffocatingly slow. Measuring out its excitement more like a morphine drip than a hit, the author insidiously builds up to a powerful conclusion. Whether he's describing Calum's last meal before the job and that of his prey or evoking the deceptively polite manners of his sinister employers, Mackay never deviates from the stony, heartless, dangerously restrained style he has set himself. It's an audacious and risky tactic, but he pulls off his first hit with the same strong nerve and cool head his hero brings to his work' Herald 'Equally original is The Necessary Death of Lewis Winter...if all this tradecraft has come straight out of Mackay's head, he's doing a damn good impression of someone who knows what he' talking about. This is frills-free storytelling: the prose is clinical and unadorned, the moralising minimal, the narrative linear with no mystery element and nothing kept secret from the reader. Yet Mackay ratchets up the tension like a master, and his ability to create rounded characters makes his book, despite its dark subject matter, a breath of fresh air' Daily Telegraph

From the Back Cover

Winner of the Crime Thriller Book Club Best Read Award

A twenty-nine-year-old man lives alone in his Glasgow flat. The telephone rings; a casual conversation, but behind this a job offer. The clues are there if you know to look for them.

He is an expert. A loner. Freelance. Another job is another job, but what if this organization wants more?

A meeting at a club. An offer. A brief. A target:

Lewis Winter.


It's hard to kill a man well. People who do it well know this. People who do it badly find out the hard way. The hard way has consequences.

An arresting, gripping novel of dark relationships and even darker moralities,
The Necessary Death of Lewis Winter is the first novel in the critically acclaimed Glasgow Trilogy.

'Brutal, witty and well-written . . . a brilliant debut'
Sunday Telegraph

'A dark, rich, brutal thriller . . . more than a page turner, it's a page ripper' Peter James
'There aren't too many crime novels that take the reader into the mind of a hit man . . . truly exceptional'
Independent
'Remarkable . . . 'tartan noir' will have a new star'
Daily Mail

Product details

  • ASIN ‏ : ‎ B00AQ2G6CI
  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Mantle
  • Accessibility ‏ : ‎ Learn more
  • Publication date ‏ : ‎ 17 Jan. 2013
  • Edition ‏ : ‎ Main Market
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • File size ‏ : ‎ 575 KB
  • Screen Reader ‏ : ‎ Supported
  • Enhanced typesetting ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • X-Ray ‏ : ‎ Not Enabled
  • Word Wise ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Print length ‏ : ‎ 337 pages
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-0230764644
  • Page Flip ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Book 1 of 6 ‏ : ‎ The Glasgow Trilogy
  • Reading age ‏ : ‎ 18 years and up
  • Customer reviews:
    4.1 out of 5 stars 1,063 ratings

About the author

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Malcolm Mackay
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Customer reviews

4.1 out of 5 stars
1,063 global ratings

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Customers say

Customers find the book a wonderful read with a good assassin tale that's believable throughout. They appreciate the excellent cast of all-star characters and are hooked from the start. The writing style receives mixed reviews - while some find it beautifully written, others say it never picks up. The pacing is also mixed, with some finding it fast-paced while others say it moves too slowly.

AI-generated from the text of customer reviews

55 customers mention ‘Readability’55 positive0 negative

Customers find the book to be a wonderful and entertaining read, with the second book being equally good.

"...Overall an excellent book especially if you like realism and good crime." Read more

"...It’s extremely readable, and I’ll definitely be tackling the follow-up novel in the trilogy." Read more

"...Brilliant!" Read more

"...The Necessary Death Of Lewis Winter" (TNDOLW) is not a bad read. It is deftly plotted and you certainly turn the pages...." Read more

48 customers mention ‘Story quality’43 positive5 negative

Customers enjoy the story quality of the book, describing it as a thriller with a difference that is believable throughout.

"...this is not the book for you but if you want something thrilling and believable then it is a must read...." Read more

"...to read a novel that gets straight to the point, where plot takes centre-stage, but characterisation isn’t forgotten about...." Read more

"...This is a good mechanism for creating atmosphere and gives a sense of reality that could not be otherwise achieved unless you intimately know a load..." Read more

"...boss, giving a reality to the gritty Glasgow background which is very convincing...." Read more

23 customers mention ‘Character development’17 positive6 negative

Customers appreciate the character development in the book, praising the excellent cast of all-star characters, with one customer noting how the protagonist's thinking is clearly shown.

"...The characters created in this book are excellent especially calum, who is portrayed as a man with a job...." Read more

"...to the point, where plot takes centre-stage, but characterisation isn’t forgotten about...." Read more

"...None of the characters is particularly likeable, and why should any of them be - professional murders, drug dealers, corrupt policemen form the..." Read more

"...The principle characters are well drawn and the book is populated with bent cops, gangster molls and innocent parties...." Read more

7 customers mention ‘Hooking’7 positive0 negative

Customers find the book engaging, with several mentioning they were hooked from the start.

"...the next novels...well done, Mr Mackay, I am totally impressed and totally hooked." Read more

"...Not disappointed. This had me smitten from the start. If you like reading about Glasgows seedier side then this is one for you." Read more

"Great story well written, I was hooked from page one." Read more

"Just brilliant- keeps you hooked.Real insight into gangland culture.Well written." Read more

42 customers mention ‘Writing style’27 positive15 negative

Customers have mixed opinions about the writing style of the book, with some finding it beautifully written while others describe it as badly written.

"Short sentences, deceptively simple language, description kept to a minimal but with characters you could pick out of a line up...." Read more

"...It is deftly plotted and you certainly turn the pages...." Read more

"...There’s no writerly flourish, though there are some very good lines and passages; and Glasgow isn’t as much of a ‘character’ as in some other ‘..." Read more

"...The style is spartan, and the emotion not too obvious - as you might expect for a professional killer...." Read more

22 customers mention ‘Pacing’12 positive10 negative

Customers have mixed opinions about the pacing of the book, with some finding it fast-paced and part of a fantastic trilogy, while others describe it as slow-moving.

"...spare, raw, minimalist, and brutal, with attempts to explain the psychology of the professional killer...." Read more

"...The constant 'telling' us of things just slows things down, and makes a mockery of the fast-paced, taut thriller the PR people behind this book..." Read more

"...those who might need his help, the book serves as a useful handbook for the professional killer, only failing to tell us how to get started...." Read more

"...So much time, so many pages wasted on detailing the thoughts and background to just about every movement or thought process anybody makes...." Read more

Top reviews from United Kingdom

  • Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 25 June 2013
    What a refreshing change to see a hero that isn't so super human its almost absurd. The characters created in this book are excellent especially calum, who is portrayed as a man with a job. A man who has learnt his trade and is intelligent and it is these elements that get him through his job. If you are hoping for a man who can take on 10 men by himself this is not the book for you but if you want something thrilling and believable then it is a must read.

    My one tiny criticism us there was a fair amount of build up at the start which meant it took a little time to properly get in to it but in hindsight perhaps it was this methodical approach that made it so believable. Overall an excellent book especially if you like realism and good crime.
  • Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 28 August 2019
    Calum MacLean is a gun for hire in Glasgow gangland, who becomes drawn into the orbit of the Jamieson crime clan. Told in stark, Ellroy-esque prose, the novel relates the story of a deadly assignment that threatens to spark gang warfare. There is no extraneous detail and very limited descriptive writing - it’s spare, raw, minimalist, and brutal, with attempts to explain the psychology of the professional killer. There’s no writerly flourish, though there are some very good lines and passages; and Glasgow isn’t as much of a ‘character’ as in some other ‘tartan noir’: really these events could be unfolding in any big city. That means it’s more universal, and it’s refreshing to read a novel that gets straight to the point, where plot takes centre-stage, but characterisation isn’t forgotten about. It’s extremely readable, and I’ll definitely be tackling the follow-up novel in the trilogy.
    4 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 10 October 2013
    Short sentences, deceptively simple language, description kept to a minimal but with characters you could pick out of a line up. This is the first book by Malcolm MacKay and part of his Glasgow trilogy. Mackay has been hailed as the latest addition to Tartan Noir but that is selling him far too short. A villain is a villain the world over and anyone, from any city, in any country, would recognize the hard-boiled ethos of the hitman central character, the cop on his tail and the sleazy, devious world in which he is forced to survive. Brilliant!
  • Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 12 November 2013
    I bought this because it was brought to my attention during the Crime Thriller Book Club Award. I also love a good noir and live in hope of discovering the new Ted Lewis. "The Necessary Death Of Lewis Winter" (TNDOLW) is not a bad read. It is deftly plotted and you certainly turn the pages. Mackay does what all good noir writers do, creates his own version of the underworld and portrays it as an "industry" that has rules and codes that are normal for those that populate that twilight world. This is a good mechanism for creating atmosphere and gives a sense of reality that could not be otherwise achieved unless you intimately know a load of gangsters and hit men.
    The principle characters are well drawn and the book is populated with bent cops, gangster molls and innocent parties. Furthermore, many of the characters are not morally black or white and as a consequence the shades of grey that are necessary for noir are well painted.
    So fare so good then, why three stars and not five?
    Well, the big weakness of this book is that it completely fails to achieve the sense of place that is so essential for great noir. If we are to walk down these mean streets, we actually have to know were they are and feel them. We only know that we are in Glasgow because Mackay tells us so. Had he not mentioned we could have been in cardboard city! This detracts enormously from the atmosphere which otherwise could have been quite brilliant.
    Frankly, Mackay could learn from the greats.
    Read Ted Lewis and you certainly know when you are in "The Smoke" -- you can feel it. He doesn't have to tell you. Ditto for Elmore Leonard's Detroit. Raymond Chandler's LA or even Mickey Spillane's NYC. Unfortunately with Mackay you could be anywhere or nowhere.
    To other readers, I would say give TNDOLW a go -- you'll probably like it.
    To Malcolm Mackay I would say read Get Carter by Ted Lewis and return to the key board. Today you are good. Tomorrow you could be great!
    One person found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 27 August 2013
    I romped through this in a couple of days, following Calum MacLean through the planning and execution of the contract to kill Lewis winter. The style is spartan, and the emotion not too obvious - as you might expect for a professional killer. As the plot progresses Calum passes through an everyday world whether living his day to day life or visiting the local criminal boss, giving a reality to the gritty Glasgow background which is very convincing.

    The second book is equally good, and I look forward to the final part of the trilogy.
  • Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 21 July 2014
    Well - this is a difficult one to give a clear score. It is written in the first person perspective from the main protagonists and as such is very interesting and gripping in that their thought processes are explained like them or not. It is very, very, believable at all stages and it is clear that the police are never going to solve this particular crime for all the reasons proposed by the criminals and police investigators. As a police procedural type of novel (and as a criminal procedural for that matter) it is excellent. The reason that I score it as a 4 star (4 minus really) and no higher is that because of the way it flows it is hard to have surprises and any element of wonderment as to what may happen next. However, it is good, and I would want to read the next one and then I expect the novelty will wear off.
  • Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 3 September 2013
    This is a very confident and well written début. It's a violent subject but this book isn't violent in it's portrayal of this cast of characters and the world they inhabit.

    There is very little description of the material world of Glasgow with the author focussed on the plot and the characters, writing in a very clipped style which at times reminded me of James Elroy.

    Highly recommended and I'll definitely be buying the next one.

Top reviews from other countries

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  • Serge Pesic
    4.0 out of 5 stars Original and compelling
    Reviewed in the United States on 14 June 2024
    Discovering any new author can be both exciting and surprising. I read a lot of Scottish Noir in the last couple of decades. Many, many good writers, but this was not what I expected. Somehow, in my mind I envisioned a rough, violent gangster opera, filled to the brim with action and adrenaline. Not this time. Malcolm Mackay's book, first in Glasgow trilogy is more like a well written, but sedate fiction novel. Here, in this den of inequity everybody seems to be just doing their job. Dangerous, violent, criminal, but still only a job. The product of their endeavors is crime, things most of us avoid like plague, but these plotters, dealers, scum of all sorts, are just workers. Interesting twist on the crime novel, original and compelling.
  • Monique P.
    5.0 out of 5 stars L'irrésistible ascension d'un tueur consciencieux.
    Reviewed in France on 6 April 2014
    Nous ne lui voulons que du bien à ce tueur consciencieux et tellement soucieux de garder son indépendance vis à vis de l'organisation pour laquelle il va tuer parce que le tueur attitré se remet d'une opération de la hanche. Place au jeune, donc! Malcolm Mackay décrit le monde de la pègre comme il le ferait pour le monde de la santé, de l'éducation ou des affaires. Sans "glamour" et sans violence excessive. Business is business. Mais nous suivons le cheminement intérieur de chaque personnage, le point de vue changeant selon les chapitres tandis que l'action avance. Et ainsi nous sommes pris au jeu.
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  • Linda and Joey
    5.0 out of 5 stars Joe says ...
    Reviewed in Canada on 28 June 2018
    Good writer with a different take on things.
  • Kenneth C. Mahieu
    5.0 out of 5 stars What an interesting title - The NECESSARY death.....
    Reviewed in the United States on 4 September 2013
    The title sets up the book perfectly. Not just in the obvious ways. Readers of crime fiction will immediately recognize this is about murder, cold-blooded murder. Premeditation. Probably not a crime of passion. "Necessary" implies calculated, business-like, an annoyance, a task. Why I make a big deal about this is because of the unique way the narrator describes the action, and similarly how many of the characters, mostly Glasgow lowlifes, mobsters, bent cops, talk and think. There is generally less dialog here, more description. We are being educated, explained to, perhaps a bit patronized. Just as the mob bosses explain matters to their underlings. But the messages are clear. "here's what I want, here's what you need to know, now do it." (and I don't need to hear your advice nor opinions). This is hardboiled, somewhat noir, but that's so overused - even among noir books, "Lewis Winter" is unique, not just in its language, but tone, descriptions. These are scary people.

    It's 322 pages, the first in a trilogy. This and other books in the trilogy have been very well received by critics. Lewis Winter is a low-level drug dealer; he has 5-6 runners peddling stuff for him. But Lewis is ambitious; he has a much younger girl friend and she has expensive tastes. Lewis needs more money to keep her happy. But in looking to build his little enterprise,he starts to step on the wrong toes. It becomes necessary to nip Lewis in the bud. Because their regular hitman is still recovering from hip surgery, the job is given to a free lancer.....No heroes in this book, but lots of very interesting characters. The author, Malcolm Mackay, introduces the cast in a two page summary upfront with a few sentences on each of the 20 or so people we'll be getting to know. Reminiscent of the character list at the front end of 1930's-40's movies. It's a fast read, tense, violent without being gory. I'll read the other two books soon. Highly recommended.
  • Miezekatze
    5.0 out of 5 stars Klasse Erzählstimme
    Reviewed in Germany on 2 March 2016
    Bei "The Necessary Death of Lewis Winter" hat mich vor allem der Erzählton begeistert. Die Story ist nicht wirklich neu, ein Killer wird beauftragt, den mittelbegabten Drogenhändler Lewis Winter zu erledigen, der den falschen Leuten auf die Zehen steigt. Neu ist, wie das Leben der einzelnen Protagonisten in kurzen Pinselstrichen angezeichnet wird. Ein Beispiel: "It's the strange thing about his flat, the thing George has never been able to understand. People always gravitate towards the kitchen to talk, rather than the living room. He either has a wonderful kitchen or an unwelcoming living room. He's not sure which." Und diese Art der Beschreibung, die wirkungsvolle Vertrautheit und Distanz verwebt, zieht sich durch das ganze Buch. Mich hat's nicht mehr losgelassen. Schade nur, dass dieser erste Band der Glasgow-Trilogie nicht eigenständig gelesen werden kann, weil er sozusagen mittendrin endet. Obwohl ich sowas als Mogelpackung empfinde und mich die Geld-aus-der-Tasche-Zieherei des Verlags annervt, der mich nötigt, weitere teure Bände zu kaufen, so mag ich das Buch nicht dafür abzustrafen. Also trotz meines Ärgers über die Publikationsstrategie 5 Sterne.

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