When Mrs. Galloway, who suffers from heart disease, finally passes away it comes as no shock to the staff at Berebury Hospital. Abel Granger's family had also been long prepared for his death that same morning. So why then has Mrs. Galloway's son called in Detective Inspector Sloan to investigate, and why is Abel Granger's doctor so uncomfortable? The only thing that seems to link the two patients is the Cardigan Protocol, a drug trial being carried out for Gilroy's, a pharmaceutical company. This, along with the unexplained disappearance of the doctor in charge of the drug trials and the surprising break-in of the Gilroy's headquarters by a group of animal rights activists, leads D. I. Sloan to suspect that something much more sinister than coincidence is afoot.
Kinn Hamilton McIntosh, known professionally as Catherine Aird, was an English novelist. She was the author of more than twenty crime fiction novels and several collections of short stories. Her witty, literate, and deftly plotted novels straddle the "cozy" and "police procedural" genres and are somewhat similar in flavour to those of Martha Grimes, Caroline Graham, M.C. Beaton, Margaret Yorke, and Pauline Bell. Aird was inducted into the prestigious Detection Club in 1981, and is a recipient of the 2015 Cartier Diamond Dagger award.
This particular Inspector Sloan story was just not all that good. Oh, it wasn't that I didn't get completely befuddled, or gripped at the climax. It was just that the first half or so of the book had such a disjointed feeling. The sentences, and especially, the dialogue felt fragmented and disorienting. I felt that I had to guess at half of what was being said, or rather not said. Once that changed, I rather liked it. The setting was certainly unique and extremely complicated. It all starts out simply enough, with a sad, but rather predictable, death in a hospital. Then surprise after surprise makes us guess at every development. Is that suicide as simple as it appears? Which woman is more than she appears? What is big-pharma hiding? Could this all be an elaborate attempt to free a few monkeys? Why are people still dying? There were a few curse words, both British and American. There was also some 'mild' profanity.
An elderly woman dies in hospital of heart failure. The death isn't unexpected but she was part of a drugs trial and her son receives an anonymous call suggesting that maybe her death was a little premature. Sloan and Crosby are clutching at straws and not getting any sort of help with their investigations when the doctor overseeing the drugs trials is found dead in his car - an apparent suicide. But, the pathologist, Dr Dabbe believes he was murdered.
As more patients at local hospitals die unexpectedly, Sloan and Crosby are involved in a race against time to prevent further deaths of doctors and patients. This is a well plotted and intriguing mystery with plenty of suspects and victims and a nail biting finish. This is an enjoyable read with plenty of humour and some likeable characters. I recommend this series to anyone who likes crime novels which concentrate on who done it and why. The series can be read in any order.
I tried hard to love this novel. I did enjoy the setting and the Inspector was okay. I felt like as a first time reader of the series, a bit more effort to add color and setting to the novel wouldn't have gone unnoticed. For me, this was very put-downable. I did in fact put it down, arguing with myself on whether I should finish it as I was bored with all the talking heads. I meandered on and didn't find anything outstanding. The bad drug tests, the secret report, the doctor with a conscience, the bad doctor with none, all culminated into a story that could have been much shorter with perhaps some action showing. But I haven't read any of the others in the series so perhaps it was just me.
Mrs. Gallagher's son is upset she's dead. But it's not the fact that her physician was young, female, not-English, or wearing jeans that spurs the police to investigate. It's the anonymous phone call saying she's dead as a result of a study that's happening. That alone is worrying. So is the fact that her primary physician, Paul Meggy (sp?), the man in charge of the drug trial, is missing. And another one of his patients is dead. This book is not fairly clued and might be a bit more meandering if you are trying to read it but was fun as a quick little audio book.
This was fun! I really liked the characters and for a change the doctors all felt unique.
Mostly I feel like Aird is making an effort to engage with a more multiracial England. It is still seriously racist and problematic but Infeel like given time she would be pretty decent at writing a more multicultural set of characters.
I liked the mystery and the way Sloane made a point of resolving all the final bits and pieces at the end.
Bit confusing, since you are in a hospital setting for some part and then a variety of other places. But this is used the murderer’s advantage. You have to look at it all to know what to see.
A quick read, filled with all sorts of interesting characters and emotions.
Won’t describe the story there’s a blurb that does that well. Good luck.
I liked the concept of this book, but I just never got into it. I normally enjoy the Sloan and Crosby mysteries much more than this one. If you're starting out, pick another one in the series...this one just rambled, and while the writing was good it just wasn't as good as I'm used to with this author. I'm giving it 3.25 stars.
This didn't seem quite as good as earlier books in the series; some of the humor seemed to me to be lacking. I was also confused as to what exactly the mystery was for the majority of the book. Drug trials, animal activists, and a missing doctor come to the attention of the police, ruining Sloan's plans for the weekend.
I have thought before that Aird must not have a very high opinion of doctors and hospitals and it definitely shows here. I am relatively sure this is the highest body count I have ever read for an Aird mystery, but are they all murders? Some clever plotting here and I felt proud of myself for figuring it out just before Sloan.
A medical mystery - a patient dies, her family complains; but then the supervising doctor dies too, near the site of a second patient's death. Was the drug trail harmful to them? Was it something else entirely? Why was the doctor murdered? Did the patients really die of natural causes?
When I first started the book, I almost didn't continue. But then it got interesting with various goings on, some deaths and I enjoyed reading because I wanted to see how it turned out. There were 2 short stories at the end that I thought were good.
Mystery set in England, I had a difficult time understanding what was going on (I'm American). I think the reader must be familiar with British slang. I'm sure if the reader reads enough British books they would have no trouble with this! David N.
I do so enjoy Inspector Sloane - but I must make an effort to enter the books more often on Good Reads than I do. I remember I enjoyed a book but it is so long after I have finished it that I usually cannot remember what the book was about.
Again, fine prose and a good, twisty mystery. This one wrapped up rather quickly, so I felt breathless at the end. Also, there were no hints, so the perp was a surprise.
A pharmaceutical company is willing to pay high for doctors to test their new drugs on patients who are going to die anyway. The deaths of a few healthy participants are suitably camouflaged.
Her books start slow for me so that I'm not sure I'll enjoy them, but somehow she always turns them around and makes them interesting. Creative mind, with good red herrings.
In this medical police procedural, Detective Inspector Sloan investigates the death of an elderly woman who took part in a drug test. The death of an old woman suffering from heart disease is not surprising, but her son questions the care provided by the doctors and demands action from the Calleshire Police. They soon discover that this death was only one in a string of similar deaths of patients taking part in the Cardigan Protocol, a double-blind drug trial from the powerful pharmaceutical company Gilroy’s. What seems to be a simple malpractice case becomes more intense when the doctor in charge of the trials can't be found and Gilroy’s is under siege by animal rights activists. Another intelligent, well-plotted story. This one is perhaps a bit darker than some of the others, due to the subject matter.
I love to find a new author especially in a genre that I read frequently. My local public library offered “After Effects” by Catherine Aird as “a hidden gem,” which was all the marketing I needed to read this mystery set in rural England.
In this novel, Detective Inspector C.D. (Christopher Dennis to his family and “Seedy” to his friends and colleagues on the police force) Sloan, looking forward to a relaxing weekend, gets mired in the investigation of the deaths of an elderly hospital patient and an elderly farmer. Their deaths may or may not be connected to clinical trials of a drug from a local lab. Written in 1996, the ethics of clinical trials including animal experimentation and data integrity are imbedded in the plot and are as relevant as today. Perhaps the only difference is the lab in question seems small in comparison to the huge, impersonal, inaccessible pharmaceutical labs of today. The opportunity, hunger and greed for great wealth for a few stakeholders remain the same.
With chapter headings taken from Bernard Shaw’s 1913 “The Doctor’s Dilemma – A Tragedy,” Aird reveals her sense of humor while skillfully foreshadowing the action.” Doctors if no better than other men are certainly no worse.”…”What you want is comfort, reassurance, something to clutch at, be it but a straw. This the doctor brings you.”… “All that can be said for medical popularity is that until there is a practical alternative to blind trust in the doctor the truth about the doctor is so terrible that we dare not face it.” Adrian Gomm, an artist hired to brighten up the façade of the old hospital creates an allegorical mural including symbols and mythological references, to create further social criticism about the medical profession, which few recognize.
The hierarchy within hospitals and police forces is played with throughout the novel. Young doctors working under critical senior professionals, Sloan working under his politically incorrect supervisor, Superintendent Leeyes, Sloan attempting to train the reckless-driving Detective Constable Crosby, both professions seem to share many problems. “You can’t afford to have feelings in medicine,” states the pathologist to Sloan, and Sloan thinks the same thing applied to policing.
The plot thickens quickly with two doctors dying, and many suspect unhappy women may be responsible. Sloan is an effective investigator and despite Leeyes’ interference and Crosby’s bumbling, he solves the murders with his critical thinking and maintains his integrity. “It was a sad commentary on today’s civilization that policemen had to be wary of altruists…”
Doing a bit of online research, I discovered the first book in this series was published in 1966, and the last, the twenty-fourth in 2014. I am curious about the changes in Detective Sloan’s professional and personal life, or if the author strayed from her wry humor, smart dialogue, or inserting literary references into the investigation. I’ll be back, detective Sloan.
Catherine Aird's books are treasures of ironic humor. Detective Inspector Sloan works through this novella with Crosby at his side and his boss, Leeyes, nipping at his heels.
Catherine Aird's father was a physician and Catherine planned on the same. However, illness interfered with her plans and instead, Aird became a gifted author.
I found it almost impossible to get through this book. The plot seemed interesting — was something so wrong with a drug trial that it was killing patients? And some of the characters seemed like fun. But the wordiness, the irrelevant details, the way the story jumped around from person to person made it hard for me to concentrate. It starts out with a switchboard operator answering the phone, for five pages. Later on the mural being painted at the hospital is described in excruciating detail (“towering arches after the style of Giambattista Piranesi were challenged by dislocation after the manner of Mauritanian Cornelius Escher”). Anyway, by skimming a lot I made it to the end and kind of got the gist of what happened even though I hardly cared anymore.