Another horrible book that everyone else seemed to love. I have to question whether I’m losing my taste for dark British Crime series, perhaps from reading too many of them. We’ve listened to the first three of these as audiobooks - I had reservations about the first one, liked the second - probably because it’s mostly about Ruiz - but am sad to report that I didn’t enjoy this at all, and will not read anything more from this series.
Joe O’Loughlin is a psychologist who has given up clinical practice because of his Parkinson’s disease, so has moved his family from London to Bath to lecture at the university. When he is asked to attend a potential suicide on the Clifton Bridge, he is horrified by his failure to prevent it, and convinced that the was coerced, so gets involved in the case - drawing the attention of a deeply sadistic psychopath with a unique method of killing.
This has most of the elements I’m sick of: a twisted misogynistic serial killer, large sections told from POV of said serial killer, a sleazy MC obsessed with womens’ looks/bodies, who blunders about making everything worse, an incompetent police force, a missing child, a difficult wife, the killer targeting the “hero”’s family (I guess that’s a spoiler but it’s totally obvious that’s what’s coming)… and to cap it all, it’s all in bloomin’ First Person Present.
An audiobook stands or falls by its narrator. Sean Barrett is fine as Joe, but to make the killer sound different and indicate who’s POV we’re hearing, puts on a harsh fast whisper that ensured I had to turn up the volume and slow down those sections to follow just he was saying. Much of what he does say is crude or horrific. Then sometimes he forgets to change his voice and it takes a while to realise the perspective has changed. Both aspects were very annoying. The other character accents weren’t bad, apart from those of the younger children - ugh.
The writing is competent - I tend not to notice it as much with audiobooks, but Joe’s rambling internal monologues grew progressively more distasteful - especially as they relate to women. The fat-shaming is relentless, as is his ogling. He’s obsessed with how beautiful his wife is - even when terrible things are happening, he takes time to comment about it. It’s all that seems to matter to him as she’s really not that nice a person. He readily believes she’s having an affair (er, Joe - book 1 - pot - kettle much?) It’s not just his wife - he reminisces about his daughter’s birth and how beautiful she was, and his first wish is that he be the first person she sees when her eyes open.
Joe’s narcissism pervades the book - no one else is as clever as him (when in fact he makes one dumb mistake after the other and really it’s the tech guys who solve the case and save the day - he just shows up and demands to be included.) Worst of all, when (another spoiler which relates to the above mentioned one) his 12 year old daughter is finally rescued, his first question is not “are you hurt?” it’s “did he abuse you?” because that’s more of an issue for him.
It’s disappointing because I had heard great things about this series, but I’ve had a peek at the reviews for the next few which confirm that I won’t be going near them and will save my Audible credits for something less disturbing. Obviously lots of these issues don’t bother other readers but I’m not willing to sit through more of this.