Skip to product information
1 of 1

Goldsboro Books

9780007117796

Blind Man of Seville

Blind Man of Seville

by Robert Wilson

Publisher HarperCollins

Genre: Crime

Publication date:

Available from:

  • Unsigned
  • UK First Edition
  • First Printing
  • Hardcover


Regular price £45.00
Regular price Sale price £45.00
Sale Sold out
Rendering loop-subscriptions

Low stock

Rendering loop-subscriptions

Limited Edition Copies

View full details
  • Professionally Packed

    All of our books that have a dust wrapper are covered in clear protective, removable film and are packed professionally in bubble wrap and a box for shipping so that they reach you in perfect condition.

  • Book Condition & Notes

    All of our books that a have dust wrapper are covered in clear protective, removable film and are packed professionally in bubble wrap and a box for shipping so that they reach you in perfect condition.

About the book

NOW A MAJOR TV DRAMA ON SKY ATLANTIC. The first crime novel in Robert Wilsons Seville series, featuring the tortured detective Javier Falcon.

The man is bound, gagged and dead in front of his television.The terrible self-inflicted wounds tell of his violent struggle to avoid some unseen horror. On the screen? In his head? What could make a man do that to himself?

It's Easter week in Seville, a time of passion and processions. But detective Javier Falcn is not celebrating. Appalled by the victim's staring eyes he is inexorably drawn into this disturbing, mystifying case. And when the investigation into the dead man's life sends Javier trawling though his own past and into the shocking journals of his late father, a famous artist, his unreliable memory begins to churn. Then there are more killings and Falcn finds himself pushed to the edge of a terrifying truth

Collapsible content

About the Author

Robert Wilson

Robert Wilson has written thirteen novels including the Bruce Medway noir series set in West Africa and two Lisbon books with WW2 settings the first of which, A Small Death in Lisbon, won the CWA Gold Dagger in 1999 and the International Deutsche Krimi prize in 2003. He has written four psychological crime novels set in Seville, with his Spanish detective, Javier Falcón. Two of these books (The Blind Man of Seville and The Silent and the Damned) were filmed and broadcast on Sky Atlantic as ‘Falcón’ in 2012. A film of the fourth Falcón book was released in Spain in 2014 under the title La Ignorancia de la Sangre. Capital Punishment, the first novel in his latest series set in London and featuring kidnap consultant, Charles Boxer, was published in 2013 and was nominated for the Ian Fleming Steel Dagger. This was followed by You Will Never Find Me in 2014.

Collapsible content

GPSR EU Safety Information

1. Manufacturer Contact Information

Goldsboro Books Ltd - 23-27 Cecil Court, London, WC2N4EZ, enquiries@goldsborobooks.com, 02074979230

2. EU Authorised Representative Information

Easy Access System Europe - Mustamäe tee 50, 10621 Tallinn, Estonia, gpsr.requests@easproject.com

3. Safety Warnings

Not applicable

  • Glass Bell Award - LONG LIST 2026

    Glass Bell Award - LONG LIST 2026

    Rebecca McDonnell

    Goldsboro Books is delighted to announce the longlist for the 2026 Glass Bell Award, celebrating outstanding storytelling across contemporary fiction. Now in its tenth year, the Glass Bell Award honours novels that...

    Rebecca McDonnell

    Glass Bell Award - LONG LIST 2026

    Goldsboro Books is delighted to announce the longlist for the 2026 Glass Bell Award, celebrating outstanding storytelling across contemporary fiction. Now in its tenth year, the Glass Bell Award honours novels that...

  • The Economics of Slowness

    The Economics of Slowness

    David H Headley

    I often think Goldsboro Books survives partly because it offers something that is becoming increasingly rare: a place where people do not feel processed. Most modern systems are built around...

    2 comments
    David H Headley

    The Economics of Slowness

    I often think Goldsboro Books survives partly because it offers something that is becoming increasingly rare: a place where people do not feel processed. Most modern systems are built around...

    2 comments
  • Did Books Feel Like an Escape From Childhood, or an Expansion of It?

    Did Books Feel Like an Escape From Childhood, o...

    David H Headley

    I have been thinking recently about the children’s books that have never left us. The ones that quietly changed something. The ones that slipped in early and rearranged how the...

    David H Headley

    Did Books Feel Like an Escape From Childhood, o...

    I have been thinking recently about the children’s books that have never left us. The ones that quietly changed something. The ones that slipped in early and rearranged how the...

  • PREM1ER: July 2026 Revealed

    PREM1ER: July 2026 Revealed

    Rebecca McDonnell

    Why We Chose All Killers Aboard for July’s PREM1ER Book For July 2026, we were looking for a novel that delivers pure entertainment without sacrificing cleverness or craft; something immersive,...

    Rebecca McDonnell

    PREM1ER: July 2026 Revealed

    Why We Chose All Killers Aboard for July’s PREM1ER Book For July 2026, we were looking for a novel that delivers pure entertainment without sacrificing cleverness or craft; something immersive,...

1 of 4