When his best friend, and advocate for the homeless, Denman Scott asks him to help stop the demolition of the Lucky Strikea once majestic hotel in Vancouver's Downtown Eastside that is now home to nearly three hundred of the city's least fortunate residentsCole Blackwater gets more than he bargained for.
Working with Vancouver Sun reporter Nancy Webber and street nurse Juliet Rose, Cole and Denman discover that homeless people in the area have been disappearing without a trace. As they venture into the dark corners of the city's underworld, and into political corruption at City Hall, they find themselves in the middle of a dangerous cabal of city officials, high-ranking cops, condo developers, and crime bosses. Can Cole and his friends unravel the mystery behind the Lucky Strikebefore any more of the Eastside's homeless find themselves on the vanishing track?
Tackling the real big-city issues of housing shortages, political corruption, and murder, The Vanishing Track is the third Cole Blackwater Mystery and the most compelling yet.
When his best friend, and advocate for the homeless, Denman Scott asks him to help stop the demolition of the Lucky Strikea once majestic hotel in Vancouver's Downtown Eastside that is now home to nearly three hundred of the city's least fortunate residentsCole Blackwater gets more than he bargained for.
"The soul of The Vanishing Track is in the dialogue: it shapes the raw tension, exposes the layers of greed and cover-up . . . The portrayal is clear; the action sharp and brutal … The Cole Blackwater stories are among the most riveting today, and The Vanishing Track is the best yet in this intensely dramatic series." —The Hamilton Spectator
"Even though the source material lends itself to preaching and moralizing, Legault wisely sticks to telling a good story. The Vanishing Track made me want to track down the first two Cole Blackwater books and, even better, has me curious about what's next for him and his friends." —National Post
"[The] best in the Cole Blackwater series." —The Globe and Mail
"A brutally honest look at life on Vancouver's Downtown Eastside. A really great read." —Senator Larry Campbell, co-author of A Thousand Dreams