The Sacred Art of Stealing is a satirical crime novel by the Scottish writer Christopher Brookmyre. It is the author's seventh book and is a stand alone sequel to A Big Boy did it and Ran Away. The book is a tale of the unusual romance between likable thief, half Scottish half Mexican, Zal Innez and D.I. Angelique de Xavia, the police officer whose job it is to catch him.

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  • ISBN 0-349-11490-0 (paperback edition)
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  • 416 (xsd:integer)
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  • ISBN 0-349-11490-0 (paperback edition)
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  • 416 (xsd:integer)
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  • The Sacred Art of Stealing is a satirical crime novel by the Scottish writer Christopher Brookmyre. It is the author's seventh book and is a stand alone sequel to A Big Boy did it and Ran Away. The book is a tale of the unusual romance between likable thief, half Scottish half Mexican, Zal Innez and D.I. Angelique de Xavia, the police officer whose job it is to catch him. Martial arts expert de Xavia is recovering from her recent experiences as told in A Big Boy did it and Ran Away The book uses a blend of typical Brookmyre black humour, strong language, violence and references to literary and artistic works such as Waiting for Godot by Samuel Beckett.
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  • 2002 First edition
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  • ISBN 0-349-11490-0 (paperback edition)
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  • Print
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  • The Sacred Art of Stealing
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  • 416 p. (paperback edition)
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  • 2003 (xsd:integer)
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  • The Sacred Art of Stealing is a satirical crime novel by the Scottish writer Christopher Brookmyre. It is the author's seventh book and is a stand alone sequel to A Big Boy did it and Ran Away. The book is a tale of the unusual romance between likable thief, half Scottish half Mexican, Zal Innez and D.I. Angelique de Xavia, the police officer whose job it is to catch him.
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  • The Sacred Art of Stealing
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  • The Sacred Art of Stealing
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