JUST A THOUGHT...
Do give books for Christmas. They're never fattening, seldom sinful, and permanently personal.
– Lenore Hershey
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Great read could be a great win!
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Norm is Oxford's bright new crime fighter. Like the late, lamented Chief Inspector Morse he's not your run-of-the-mill detective.
That said, there are one or two key differences:
Norm uses the buses, or borrows his girlfriend's Ford Ka.
He drinks lager sometimes.
He likes Buddy Holly and REM and Bruce Springsteen.
Oh ... and he's not a policeman.
He does like crosswords, however.

Two of the first 10 buyers of this book had a Lottery win the following week. You, too, could be a big winner by ordering a copy.
However, we appreciate that these are difficult financial times, so Huck Books is offering a FREE national lottery ticket with every copy of The Trouble With Money ordered through this website.
Whether it's a winning ticket or not, you just can’t lose ...
See what readers said:
A terrific read. I normally only read for 20-30 minutes at a time, but I was still engrossed an hour later. Very good mix of drama and humour and a twist that I didn't see coming.
– T.S., Lincolnshire
I've always wanted to read a real account of a major lottery win, the ups and downs. This is so realistic it could easily be true life.
– S.S., Glasgow
It's one of those books where you can identify with the characters. Where you get involved with them. It was hard to put down once I'd started.
– B.B., Derby
Norman Philip Ducker is far from the norm. Cosmology and religion and the mathematics of chaos fascinate him. So do football and rugby and the art of winning. But he still can't get his head round Doris Lessing.
Norm is a civilian employed by the police as a coordinator for Crimestoppers, the charity that invites anonymous tip-offs. He isn't overkeen, however, on police procedure and political correctness. He relies on an acute sense of hearing, a good memory, and a strange logic to weave a way through laborious official channels and tangles of red tape.
This is the story of how he battles the Brass to play a key part in unravelling a complicated web of murder. It also happens to be a moving love story.
Meet Oxford's new crime fighter
... Inspector Morse he ain't!
Huck Books ... the home of writer Frank Rawlins