"Great Britain" . . . . "Fiction" . . . "The Soft detective" . "Mystery fiction"@en . "Mystery fiction" . . . . . . . . . . . "Electronic books" . . . . . . . "The soft detective"@en . "The soft detective" . . "When Detective chief Inspector Phil Benholme investigates the the baffling murder of Nobel Prize-winning Professor Unwala, he is disturbed to discover that his own teenage son could be the prime suspect in the crime." . "It's not often a Nobel Prize winner gets murdered... on your patch... very likely by a member of your own family... DCI Phil Benholme has the reputation for being a little soft because he tries to see both sides of every story. And if he hadn't on this occasion, the murder of Professor Unwala - Nobel Prize winner of 1945 - would have been recorded as a tragic accident. .. Was the elderly man a victim of a violent burglary? Or of a racist assault by Britforce troopers? Or did he know something about the collection of Celtic coins thought to be buried nearby? Clearly Inspector Benholme has a number of leads to follow up. Unfortunately they all point to one person - Conor Benholme. What does a 'soft cop' do when his teenage son is also his prime suspect... ?" . . . . . . . . . . . . "Detective and mystery stories"@en . "Detective and mystery stories" . . . "Large type books"@en . . . . . . . . . . . "In England, detective Phil Benholme experiences a policeman's worst nightmare: his son becomes a suspect in the murder of a professor. The case involves drugs." . . . . "Fiction"@en . "Romans policiers." . . "Benholme, Phil (Fictitious character)" . .