Publishing date May 26th 2022
EDIIT: I actually reconsidered after thinking more about this novel. It deserves a higher rating for the lack of excessive sleaze, regardless of my little frustrations here and there. So it goes five stars.
Blurb:
ONCE, SHE SAVED HIS LIFE...
NOW, HE'LL TAKE HERS.
When a baby is snatched from its pram and cast into the river Thames, off-duty police officer Lacey Flint is there to prevent disaster. But who would want to hurt a child?
What a dramatic opening to a book. At least, the current (Now) part of the plot. The much earlier event (Then), which is the actual opening of the book, was equally horrific and darkly creepy as hell. Breathtakingly so.
This was a dark, detective drama / thriller with many onion layers to peel off. I haven't read the series, so cannot compare it with the previous ones.
If you want to just read another version of the million you already read in this genre, this will be as entertaining and riveting as always. This time around a suspense thriller was built around a strong political message to women.
I surely learnt something new. My word. Have you ever heard about the 'incels' or 'involuntary celibates'? Well, that surprised me. It really did.
I checked on the internet. These subgroups actually do exist, destroying the serious challenges of #Menmatters groups who deal with serious issues, such as:
parental alienation;
job-, and race discrimination (anti-white male propoganda);
extreme spousal abuse( women abusing men);
jail time for non-payment of child support, especially refusal to pay for non-biological children;
boys who grew up without father figures - there are 24 million of these boys in America alone, and so on.
These male 'incels' groups are as bad to an honest Men movement as women trying to cash in on the #metoo movement by lying in court, thus damaging the real victims of women abuse.
Most of these groups, male and female, started as a result of bad things happening to people on a collective scale. They have valid reasons to exist.
In this novel, International Women's Day is so okay. International Men's Day is not. And... I was wondering... what will the opposite of male 'incels' be called? There certainly are female counterparts for sure. Imagine if 'they' decide to organize.
From the blurb: DCI Mark Joesbury has been expecting this. Monitoring a complex network of dark web sites, Joesbury and his team have spotted a new terrorist threat from the extremist, women-hating, group known as 'incels' or 'involuntary celibates.' Joesbury's team are trying to infiltrate the ring of power at its core, but the dark web is built for anonymity, and the incel army is vast.
So the mix is on.
Sadly, I was inspired by the first half of the book, and then my enthusiasm faded out. Perhaps it was the written-for-women, as well as probably the misandry nature of the underlying propaganda. Misandry revenge on misogyny, sort of. The irony... Hopefully it will make you smile. There's nothing to smile about this outlandish inflated, overblown drama otherwise.
It was unconvincing and meh-ish. The denouement just dragged on over several chapters, in an abyss of side-tracks, to confuse the reader.
But. It's a great thriller for women who prefer all the heroes to be women, and all the bad villains to be either beastly, weak, loser men.
Despite the gripes, the author ticked off a few positive boxes that should be rewarded.