Fiona Erskine

ALLi Author Member

Location: United Kingdom (the)

Genres: Thriller, Fantasy/SciFi/Speculative, Literary Fiction, Popular Science, Crime, Mystery, Narrative Nonfiction, Nature/Science

Skills: Press/Media Interview, Reading/Literary Event, Speaking Engagement/Lecture, Writing Workshop

Engineer by day, writer by night.

Fiona Erskine's books

The Chemical Detective

Working on avalanche control in the Julian Alps, Dr Jaq Silver blows things up to keep people safe.

She identifies a faulty batch of explosives and her world begins to unravel. After raising a complaint with the supplier, a multinational chemical company, her evidence disappears and she is framed for murder.

From the ski resorts of Slovenia to the abandoned nuclear power complex in Chernobyl, Ukraine, Jaq must uncover the truth before time runs out.

The Chemical Reaction

Deep in debt, engineer Dr Jaq Silver agrees to go to China on behalf of a Teesside entrepreneur.

The chemical factory she is meant to investigate disappears, along with a former student.

Jaq teams up with a troupe of male strippers and together they travel to the Banqiao Dam to unlock the mystery.

The Chemical Cocktail

When Jaq’s mother dies, she travels from Portugal to Brazil to get to the bottom of a family mystery.

But she is not the only one with an interest in her unusual inheritance.

Racing against the clock as threats to her life increase on all sides, Jaq must use her scientific know-how to save what matters most.

The Chemical Code

Amid the heat of Brazil, explosives expert Jaq Silver has one goal – vengeance.

When her enemies take what she treasures most, she will do anything to make them pay.

But a series of betrayals leave Jaq unsure of those she can trust. Is Jaq chasing down the right target? And who is pursuing her?

Phosphate Rocks: A Death in Ten Objects

When an old Edinburgh factory is demolished, workers make a gruesome discovery.

A body is uncovered, seated at a card table with ten objects.

Whose body is it? How did they die and what is the significance of the objects?

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