Caro Ramsay is a Scottish writer of crime novels. Previous novels were set in Glasgow.
Yet this novel The Devil Stone, the first in a new series, takes us from Glasgow to the Scottish Highlands.
Main protagonist DCI Chrstine Caplan, former ballet dancer and health freak, is transferred and demoted to DI for allegedly being sloppy with evidence. She is transferred to deal with the murders of a wealthy old Scottish family: the McGregors. The entire family, with the exception of youngest son Adam, has been gruesomely killed. Two young burglars stumble upon their bodies and flee the crime scene sick with misery.
You dive straight into the story; it took me a long time to realise what was happening in the prologue. To be honest, I completely lost track in the beginning; for instance, I didn't understand why that bicycle incident in the very beginning had anything to do with the plot. Only at the very end of the novel does that too become clear.
I found the beginning incoherent and felt like I had landed in the middle of a story. Initially, I was very bothered by Caplan's husband, who sleeps and hangs in front of the telly all day. I found it hard to believe that such a strong, bossy woman would put up with this for seven years. I would really go crazy if I had someone like that around me, and then, when you come home from work, you get the whole housekeeping on you as well. Insane! I think very few marriages can withstand such behaviour, by far most would have really pulled the plug after a few years.
I didn't find the staged ritual killings very convincing, especially the various references to Silence of the Lambs (the Polaroid pictures) & the Manson Family I found to be far-fetched. It seems like the writer is really trying too hard here to make us believe what it is all about.
Bringing in Sir Arthur Conan Doyle - and the infamous Cottingley Fairies hoax I found strange, although I really understand why the author brings up this topic, but as a huge Doyle fan I don't really think it's neat to compare his Spiritualism with Satanism. Different time, different values. I personally find it a bit weak to ridicule anyone for that reason.
I found the first half of the book boring, I really had to struggle through the story, only after 60% does it get interesting and exciting. I did like the ending, but it came across as a bit rushed, as if everything had to come together all at once now, in a somewhat of a 'fairy tale' ending.
For me, it is Craigo who takes the story to the next level. His clumsiness, yet always coming up with just the right prompts when the situation calls for it, he reminded me a lot of the character Dodds, from the British crime series MacDonald & Dodds (played by actor Jason Watkins). I really liked the banter between Caplan & Craigo, her initial irritation and distrust towards him, even though he ends up saving her - in more ways than she thought possible. Fortunately, the author has chosen to pair her with Dodds/Craigo, and together they will fight crime in beautiful Scotland!
Looking forward to the next part. Thank you Netgalley and the publisher for this review copy. I leave this review voluntarily.
3 stars.
** Publication date: August 31, 2023 **