The Lemur has pace & bravado; the writing is sharp & the timing flawless while the prose naturally is brilliant Time Out William Big Bill Mulholland is an Irish-American electronics billionaire. An ex-CIA operative he now heads up the Mulholland Trust with the help of his daughter Louise. When Mulholland gets wind of a hostile biography planned by journalist Wilson Cleaver he commissions his daughters husband John Glass to pen the official line. But neither he nor Glass had reckoned on the sinister services of the Lemur. It turns out that silence cannot be bought -- even by one of New Yorks wealthiest dynasties.. . The Lemur lives up to expectations. The writing is lighter & sleeker than his literary fiction but without any loss of his ability to perfectly describe situations & sensations. Engrossing reading Irish Mail on Sunday The Lemur displays an emotional poignancy that is present in both of Blacks previous works Independent on Sunday What stands out is Blacks portrayal of contemporary New York its towers of steel & glass providing a glossy background for a tale in which no one is trusted. Its an edgy read worthy of Don De Lillo Evening Standard