Robbie Morrison was born in Helensburgh, Scotland, and grew up in the Renton, Coatbridge, Linwood and Houston. On both sides, his family connection to shipbuilding in Glasgow and the surrounding areas stretches back four generations and is a source of inspiration for the Jimmy Dreghorn series. One of the most respected writers in the UK comics industry, he sold his first script to publishers DC Thomson in Dundee at the age of twenty-three. Edge of the Grave, the first Jimmy Dreghorn novel, won the Bloody Scotland Debut Crime Novel of the Year, was shortlisted for the Crime Writers' Association Historical Dagger, and the Fingerprint Awards Debut Book of the Year, and longlisted for the Historical Writers' Association Debut Crown.
A darkly compelling thriller . . . Morrison succeeds in summoning Depression-era Glasgow in a powerful work of crime fiction * The Sunday Times * Morrison hasn’t so much written a novel as built a time machine: step in and be transported * The Scotsman * This is Peaky Blinders territory, though with the police at its heart rather than gangsters. Packed with dramatic action and unforgettable characters, it casts a hypnotic spell and stirs the blood * Daily Mail * Morrison writes with vividness and perception, and he is effective at showing action from multiple perspectives. Fast-moving and engaging * Literary Review * A magnificent and enthralling portrait of a dark and dangerous city and the men and women who live and die in it. An astounding debut -- Mark Billingham on <i>Edge of the Grave</i>, bestselling author of the Tom Thorne series Tense, absorbing and dripping with gallus Glasgow humour, this book is absolutely wonderful -- Abir Mukherjee on <i>Edge of the Grave</i>, bestselling author of the Wyndham and Banerjee series Morrison's writing is so fluid, his dialogue so pitch perfect, the book fairly demands you stay up all night turning the pages -- James Oswald, bestselling author of the Inspector McLean series Vivid characters, a finely drawn portrait of Glasgow in the 1930s and a page turning narrative. What more could you want? -- Alan Parks, author of <i>May God Forgive</i>, winner of the 2022 McIlvanney Prize Jimmy Dreghorn is back—with a vengeance. Cast a Cold Eye is a twisting, sharp-edged tale of a violent past echoing in a violent city. 1930s Glasgow is masterfully conjured in every soot-stained tenement, every smoke-filled pub, every menace-shadowed street corner. Morrison is on top form here. Superb -- Craig Russell, international bestselling author of <i>Hyde</i> A joyous Glaswegian nightmare. Sectarian ley lines, loyalty and betrayal, love and loss. By turns brutal and hilarious, told in a rich vernacular with an acute sense of time and place, the return of Dreghorn and McDaid in Cast a Cold Eye is another triumph from Robbie Morrison -- Dominic Nolan, author of <i>The Times</i> Book of the Month, <i>Vine Street</i>