The local New Age health center was making a killing. Two stranglings lead Inspector Stephen Ramsay to the local center for alternative healing where the victims were known. Meanwhile, the murderer quietly observes Ramsay--planning a new slaying.
Ann is the author of the books behind ITV's VERA, now in it's third series, and the BBC's SHETLAND, which will be aired in December 2012. Ann's DI Vera Stanhope series of books is set in Northumberland and features the well loved detective along with her partner Joe Ashworth. Ann's Shetland series bring us DI Jimmy Perez, investigating in the mysterious, dark, and beautiful Shetland Islands...
Ann grew up in the country, first in Herefordshire, then in North Devon. Her father was a village school teacher. After dropping out of university she took a number of temporary jobs - child care officer, women's refuge leader, bird observatory cook, auxiliary coastguard - before going back to college and training to be a probation officer.
While she was cooking in the Bird Observatory on Fair Isle, she met her husband Tim, a visiting ornithologist. She was attracted less by the ornithology than the bottle of malt whisky she saw in his rucksack when she showed him his room. Soon after they married, Tim was appointed as warden of Hilbre, a tiny tidal island nature reserve in the Dee Estuary. They were the only residents, there was no mains electricity or water and access to the mainland was at low tide across the shore. If a person's not heavily into birds - and Ann isn't - there's not much to do on Hilbre and that was when she started writing. Her first series of crime novels features the elderly naturalist, George Palmer-Jones. A couple of these books are seriously dreadful.
In 1987 Tim, Ann and their two daughters moved to Northumberland and the north east provides the inspiration for many of her subsequent titles. The girls have both taken up with Geordie lads. In the autumn of 2006, Ann and Tim finally achieved their ambition of moving back to the North East.
For the National Year of Reading, Ann was made reader-in-residence for three library authorities. It came as a revelation that it was possible to get paid for talking to readers about books! She went on to set up reading groups in prisons as part of the Inside Books project, became Cheltenham Literature Festival's first reader-in-residence and still enjoys working with libraries. Ann Cleeves on stage at the Duncan Lawrie Dagger awards ceremony
Ann's short film for Border TV, Catching Birds, won a Royal Television Society Award. She has twice been short listed for a CWA Dagger Award - once for her short story The Plater, and the following year for the Dagger in the Library award.
In 2006 Ann Cleeves was the first winner of the prestigious Duncan Lawrie Dagger Award of the Crime Writers' Association for Raven Black, the first volume of her Shetland Quartet. The Duncan Lawrie Dagger replaces the CWA's Gold Dagger award, and the winner receives £20,000, making it the world's largest award for crime fiction.
Ann's success was announced at the 2006 Dagger Awards ceremony at the Waldorf Hilton, in London's Aldwych, on Thursday 29 June 2006. She said: "I have never won anything before in my life, so it was a complete shock - but lovely of course.. The evening was relatively relaxing because I'd lost my voice and knew that even if the unexpected happened there was physically no way I could utter a word. So I wouldn't have to give a speech. My editor was deputed to do it!"
The judging panel consisted of Geoff Bradley (non-voting Chair), Lyn Brown MP (a committee member on the London Libraries service), Frances Gray (an academic who writes about and teaches courses on modern crime fiction), Heather O'Donoghue (academic, linguist, crime fiction reviewer for The Times Literary Supplement, and keen reader of all crime fiction) and Barry Forshaw (reviewer and editor of Crime Time magazine).
Ann's books have been translated into sixteen languages. She's a bestseller in Scandinavia and Germany. Her novels sell widely and to critical acclaim in the United States. Raven Black was shortlisted for the Martin Beck award for best translated crime novel in Sweden in 200
Well this did not end the way I thought it would. Which is a good thing. This takes a few months or even a year after the last book. We have Ramsay settled with Prue and investigating a couple of murders that do not seem tied together. When you eventually get to the who dun it and why it has you going how you could have missed such a thing. But honestly, I thought this was very clever and loved how Cleeves looped everything together.
"The Healers" follows Ramsay as he and Hunter are called in when an older farmer is found dead in his house. Two travelers live on his land and at first suspicions are that one of them had something to do with it. But when a woman ends up dead with ties to the wellness spot in town, Ramsay and Hunter start delving into a world of alternative therapies.
I love how methodological Ramsay is. He won't be rushed. Though Hunter and now another officer at times think he is too slow, they both end up admiring him because he is not going to be rushed. We saw how the events in the first book in the series still affect Ramsay and how focused he is on not rushing to judgement and not ruining people because the police turn up asking questions.
Hunter is still pretty awful though I ended up feeling for him at the end of this one.
The characters we follow in this one are definitely memorable. For once I wanted the book to go on since I was so curious about what happened to a few of the secondary characters.
The dialogue and inner thinking of the characters worked very well as did the flow.
I honestly had no idea at who dun it and why until the very end. Great resolution!
The Healers (Inspector Ramsey, #5) by Ann Cleeves.
An excellent book published in 1995-6, but written in 1988 long before Vera or the Shetland series came into view. This is my 2nd Inspector Ramsey book and I delighted in reading it. My only sad note in passing is that this is the last of Inspector Ramsey. Perhaps I will hold out hope that A.C. may bring him back. I can only hope. This story brings together hippies of a sort, a new age healing center and murder, which calls for Inspector Ramsey. The ending could have only be created by this marvelou8s and gifted author.
Loved it and most highly recommend it. You won't be disappointed.
I really like Ann Cleeves' Inspector Stephen Ramsey Mysteries. The series started out slowly, but it has grown on me. There is only one more in the series. It is on my "Wish List" on www.paperbackswap.com. I am interested to know if Ms. Cleeves closes the series. This book was published in 1995 so not sure where the series goes from here. I will have to "Google" it.
Simon and I listened to the audiobook together and agreed that the story was a bit convoluted and difficult to follow at times. I did enjoy getting to know the characters.
Ann Cleeves wrote this series earlier in her career. In some ways, I feel I would have rather read this before her Vera Stanhope series, which is superior, demonstrating how she has developed her skills as a writer.
Plot, setting and character are well melded in this fifth Ramsay novel. Isolation and community play off against each other, both with potential for healing but also for destruction.
Ramsay is growing in confidence as Hunter, mercifully, has a tiny self-doubt.
What I most like in this series is the acceptance of human struggle - the fears, desires, hopes and needs that motivate both major and minor characters. The tension lies in the extent to which individuals manage to balance and control these forces for the good of the community - and ultimately their own sanity and wellbeing. The job of the detectives involves understanding the tensions and persuading the community to resolve or release some of them to reveal information, while themselves subject to some of the same.
It’s this core acceptance of human frailty, of moral and psychological struggle which hold me captive. In later series it becomes an undertow. Here it is in plain sight.
This started a little slower than the other books in the series but built up into a good thriller indeed. I never guessed the giuilty party as usual sso Ann Cleeves is still keeping me on my toes. I like the relationship between the socially inept and self doubting Insppector Ramsey and his all guns blazing, full of himself, bull in a chins shop sergeant, Hunter. The book centres around an alternative treatment centre and some farm land in Northumberland some 50 miles from Newcastle. There are a few good twists and the reader is kept entertained. I like the series and this instalment didn't disappoint.
The 5th Inspector Ramsay that I have read in quick succession, in order, and it has been worth doing that for the character development of both Ramsay and his off-sider Hunter. The setting is once again a small community of fairly tightly knit people.
We start off with a bachelor farmer found dead on his kitchen floor, strangled, after a night when he went out on a blind date.
There is a range of quirky characters in this one, and a lovely lot of red herrings. I had my major suspect but I was wrong! These are very satisfying reads. I'm just sad there is only one more in the series.
I blundered into another of Cleeves’s detective sagas about half way through the series. Still no worries, it is easy enough to pick up the dynamic. It is set in the NE, the lead detective is the polar opposite of his sidekick and therefore they don’t get on, the sidekick seems too dim to be a copper and definitely too dim to a detective. Oh, then there is the daughter of an MP; is that a Cleeves’ standard or just common character in detective novels? Added to that there is the prototype for Jonathan’s Arts Centre and the killer’s motives are tenuous in the extreme. Any of this familiar? A good enough read but basically ‘bang average’.
It's interesting to see how many of the features of the Vera Stanhope novels are developing earlier in Ann Cleeves' career. Having at least one member of the police team be a bit of an obnoxious jerk is an interesting way of creating some conflict within the forces of the good guys. Nature and family continue to play enormous roles.
The 'healing' setting was an interesting setting and gave the opportunity for some different perspectives. Enjoyable, and I still can't guess the end of the author's books!
'The Healers' is the fifth novel in the Inspector Ramsay series.
The healers in this book are the three owners of the Alternative Therapy Centre, Mittingford, in England’s county of Northumberland. The three are Daniel Abbott, an acupuncturist; his wife, Win, a homeopath; and Win’s mother, who offers healing through rebirthing.
A former patient at the Centre, Cissie Bowles (owner of Laverock Farm) was impressed with the treatment she received for her severe arthritis. She wrote her will so that, on her death, the farm would go to her son, Ernie. Should he die without issue, it would then pass to the Alternative Therapy Centre.
A few months after Cissie’s death, Northumbria police receive a call that Ernie has been strangled. He was in his late 50s, unmarried and without issue. Detective Inspector Stephen Ramsay and Detective Sergeant Gordon Hunter are assigned to investigate.
Although Ernie Bowles was generally disliked and most are pleased ‘he is no longer with us’, no-one thinks the dislike was serious enough to cause him to be strangled. Also, the three owners of the Alternative Therapy Centre have water tight alibis. Ramsay and his team are becoming despondent.
Then, the unexpected happens.
'The Healers' is a cosy murder mystery of 231 pages with twists that surprise and townsfolk who have secrets they are reluctant to divulge to the police.
Ramsay now has colleagues who respect his intelligence, intuition and dedication. Together, they achieve a result where they can all say: I am proud that I’m a police officer.
Inspector Stephen Ramsey and his oafish sidekick, Sgt Hunter, are called to murder on a farm. While the farmer had been a strange individual, it’s hard to believe anyone would care enough to kill him. The investigation soon focuses on a new age / alternative medicine shop and clinic which had been promised the land upon the farmer’s death. When more bodies surface and anonymous notes cast doubt on what was previously considered a suicide, Ramsey and Hunter have their work cut out for them to make all the pieces fit.
I enjoyed the mix of suspects and other characters in this 5th Inspector Ramsey book, especially the introduction of a quick-witted young female constable who ran rings around Hunter and couldn’t bear his bull-at-a-gate manner. This was largely about the solid police work of chasing down all the logistics to see who could have been where and when at each murder. I would have liked more insight into Ramsey’s background and personality but we did start to see Hunter as a more complete person—I hope that continues. These early works are not of the quality of Ann Cleeves’ later series, but they are clear stepping stones on her way to greatness. 🎧 UK voice actor Simon Mattacks does a good job on the audio.
A mixed bag. As a description of life in a segment of modern small-town society, OK. As a collection of red herrings, yes, quite a scattering of them. However the reason the red herrings were so effective was that the real motivations for three apparent murders were so thin that they could hardly be anticipated.
At the risk of spoilers - (not quite revealing who dun what), it turns out that only one of the three deaths was actually a murder, the other two were a suicide and a concealed justifiable homicide: a woman fighting off a man who was trying to rape her had killed him in the process, but then made off without reporting it. The only real murder was done by a man who feared someone close to him might be wrongly accused of murder in one of the other deaths, and killed someone because he thought that would prevent the said wrongful accusation being brought. I suppose that gains points for novelty as one of the most bizzare motives in detective fiction, but it loses more for implausibility.
Number 5 in the Inspector Ramsey series. Ernie Bowles lives in this ramshackle of a place, in need of renovation and inherited from his mother. A rather difficult man he is found dead by a neighbour, Lily Jackman who lives with her partner in a caravan on his property. A few days later Val McDougal is found dead. There doesn’t seem to be any connection between Ernie and Val. Lily, the neighbour who found Ernie has attended workshops at the Alternative Therapy Workshop along with Val. When a third body turns up, similarly strangled and also with some connection to this therapy centre then Ramsey and his team need to act quickly.
A most enjoyable read. I found Ramsey softening, enjoying his friend Prue, and being prepared to go gentle both in his work and with himself. This was a development in his character that was most attractive. His side kick Hunter, still gets frustrated with Ramsey's style but he shows a hint of reflection at times. Both men find ways to cope with each other. This makes this novel most interesting and enjoyable.4 stars.
This is the fifth in the Inspector Ramsay series by Ann Cleeves.
Written in the 1990s before the Shetland, Vera and Two Rivers series. This is classic police/ crime procedural in a very long line of traditional English whodunnits. Back to a time thirty years ago without mobiles and computers and phone calls and face to face interviews.
This is a story centring around a healing centre and a farming community. Pitch perfect plotting and red herrings abound until the denouement. It’s easy to see how Ann Cleeves rose to the top of her game by 2025 as this series shows her perfecting her craft.
Great characterisation and interplay. The Ramsay / Hunter relationship juxtaposes two characters - a gentle man carefully gathering the evidence and the “old fashioned macho” type of police man ( still living at home with mum) that wants to show testosterone can get the results yet knowing he’s missing things from being less than subtle.
Getting acquainted with this series has been so much fun. I have high hopes for the future of this series, hopefully on television. “The Healers” (originally released in 1995) is the 5th entry in Ann Cleeves’ Inspector Ramsay series. In each of the novels, we see Ramsay grow as an inspector. I love the little details of this character and depth Cleeves continues to add to him.
This seems like an impossible mystery. Not a locked room mystery that is so common today. No, this one takes place in a wide-open isolated place. This eventually leads to several other murders that Ramsay believes is all connected. Inspector Ramsay is deliberate in his investigation, and the mystery leads to brilliant conclusion.
Simon Mattacks is perfect in his narration and such a joy to listen to.
Only one more book to go in this series and I, for one, will be sad to see it end.
Thank you to NetGalley and the Publisher for providing an ARC for an unbiased review.
The Healers by Ann Cleeves is the 5th of her Inspector Ramsey novels originally released in the mid 90s. I was able to get an advanced listener copy of the audiobook that will be released for the first time January 6th. Before reading this book, I had never read anything by Ann Cleeves, but was familiar with her work because of the Vera television series. The Healers is an entertaining procedural mystery with lots of twists and turns. Without reading the first four books, I was able to jump into the story without missing a beat. If you love a British crime show, this one is for you.
Simon Mattacks narration was well done. I enjoyed his accent and the way he differentiated each character. Overall the listening experience was entertaining and easy to follow along with. I will definiteley be looking for the rest of the series when it comes out on January 6th. Thank you NetGalley and Macmillan Audio for an ALC of this book in exchange for my honest review.
I don't know why it took me so long to discover this book, however I'm glad I did. I read it when the UK was in lockdown did to the coronavirus pandemic. It was a much welcomed distraction. The writing and the characters we're not quite as polished as in her later books but the story was every bit as clever. As the story progressed I thought I had the killer sussed, only to change my opinion later. In the end I didn't get it correct which made a welcome change from the many whodunnits where the plot is obvious fairly early in the book. To be critical by the time I had finished the book I found myself disliking most of the characters; the two I quite liked were underdeveloped and not fully fleshed out. Nonetheless it was a thoroughly satisfying read.
"They found middle-aged farmer Ernie Bowles lying on his kitchen floor. He had been strangles, and was not a pretty sight. Inspector Stephen Ramsey fears that this case will not be simple. In his experience, most murders are straightforward: an explosion for family pressure, the loss of control n a fight. But Bowles seems to have kept himself to himself, and Ramsey feels that to solve the mystery of his death he will need all the help he can get. Then another person is strangled, a woman who , on the surface, had absolutely no connection with the dead farmer. Surely two such killings in the same locality are more than just chilling coincidences?" ~~back cover
A nice little English mystery. The usual dissonance between Ramsey and DS Hunter -- the younger, surlier, more arrogant of the two. This one ended exactly as I didn't think it could end. How clever is that?
I immediately followed Ramsay #4 by reading this one in the series and enjoyed the juxtaposition. I thought #5 was a bit better than #4 - but then I think the Ramsay series (early in Cleeves long oeuvre) has improved steadily with each novel.
The Healers of the title refers to a centre for wellbeing, using alternative therapies. It provides a link between many of the characters but not all, which is frustrating for Ramsay and his offsider Hunter as they seek the solution to the murders. The first murder is of a grumpy old farmer. A couple living in a caravan on his property are immediate suspects but when other murders are committed the plot becomes very complicated. Cleeves is always in control of her material though. As in all her books, she also reveals the importance and tensions of different communities and how pressure can build towards violence.
Farmer Ernie Bowles was discovered strangled on his kitchen floor. His lifeless body was discovered by New Age traveller Lily Jackman, she and her boyfriend Shaun had parked their caravan on Bowles land. Inspector Ramsay can’t understand who wanted to kill Ernie, he lived alone and didn’t bother with anyone. A woman, home alone is strangled when she answers the front door and later, a young man is killed in a cemetery in the late afternoon. A very tenuous link is discovered between the three murders. They are all connected to the Alternative Therapy Centre. A gripping mystery, that kept my interest to the very end.
This is a fairly decent mystery novel by an author I like. I don't think all that much about Inspector Ramsay, though, as he seems a bit of a ditherer. If you didn't understand what a witness meant by their statement, just ask, for crying out loud! You're a policeman, after all. The bolshie Sgt. Hunter gets a fair bit of page time, and clearly Ramsay is not really up to a bit of short, sharp discipline. Lovers of whodunnits might guess the culprit, although there are certainly some red herrings. There's quite an exciting ending where Sgt. Hunter almost earns his pay. Ramsay expounds the solution to his team, and that's a wrap. I give this a 3.7.
“The Healers” is the fifth installment in Ann Cleeves’s Inspector Ramsay series. The narrative begins with the discovery of Ernie Bowles, an isolated farmer, found strangled in his kitchen. Inspector Stephen Ramsay is called to investigate this perplexing case. As the investigation unfolds, a second woman is found strangled, leading Ramsay to suspect a connection between the murders. Both victims had ties to the Alternative Therapy Centre in Mittingford, raising questions about the healers’ involvement. 
In “The Healers,” Cleeves masterfully weaves a tale of suspense, exploring the murky intersections of alternative medicine and murder, keeping readers guessing until the final pages.
Really, Ms Cleeves, why do you have such a narcissist as Hunter working in a police force? Well, yes, I guess you could be very accurate about that, looking at some notable NZ police narcissists in the press over the past 20 years. He is so unpleasant as to colour the whole investigation, and I found this book difficult to get interested in. I prefer Ramsay to Vera Stanhope though. Murky plot, unconvincing ending. These people were nastier than necessary! Probably the last Ann Cleeves' I will try to read. On the other hand, I have to say she is very insightful into what makes people tick...
The Healers is Book #5 in the Inspector Ramsay series written by Ann Cleeves. “News of the murder came to Inspector Stephen Ramsay early one Monday morning: isolated farmer Ernie Bowles was found lying on his kitchen floor, gruesomely strangled.” When 2 more suspicious deaths in the same locality occur, it seems more than a coincidence. A very tenuous link between all 3 victims takes on a new importance - a link to the alternative Therapy Center in Mittingford. Could one of the healers be a killer? This title and series is highly recommended. **** This series is an early work of Ann Cleeves, published in the 1990s in the U.K. It is currently (2025) available in the U.S.
I really struggle with this one as I have struggled with this author before but keep seeing the good reviews and thought it must be me so I gave this one a go. I finally finished listening to it and nearly gave up the story was there but for the red herrings really could not be bothered to work it out. I can't believe this is the same author of Vera and Shetland unless they have been adapted a lot for t.v.
My first Ann Cleeves read. Kept me ticking over interest wise. I didn't have a vested interest in any of the characters but enjoyed how they took shape from the page. Good character descriptions without being bored. I decided to read this book because it was called The Healers not realizing it was a murder mystery and nothing to do with Healing. I don't read murder stuff. But it was okay & I'd definitely read another Ann Cleeves novel.