3.5 stars
This has been my long-car-ride audiobook for a bit of time now, and on the drive to PHL to catch a flight, I finally finished it. It's got very mixed, almost polarizing reviews among my friends who've read it, and while I don't necessarily disagree with all of their points, I actually enjoyed this story quite a bit. Perhaps that was because I listened to this rather than reading the print, and I really liked the way that he read most of the characters. I will say that I liked the reader a lot more by the end of the book than I did at the beginning. At the beginning, I was somewhat distracted by the fact that he would take in an audible mini-gasp of air before speaking. EVERY. SINGLE. SENTENCE. But after a while, either he stopped doing that as he got into the flow of the story, or I stopped noticing. And at some point, it just happened that whenever I would get back into this, it would just sort of immerse me, and I liked that.
It was definitely a slow build, and some of the developments and investigation techniques were somewhat baffling, and at times it was dancing right on the edge of COME ON, GUYS, THE KILLER IS LITERALLY RIGHT THERE!! territory... but the plausibility of the ignorance was realistic to me, due to the time period this takes place in, as well as the attitudes of the time, so I accepted it and moved on.
There were quite a few characters that I really liked, and one that I liked and was sad to see not make it to the end, as I would have really liked to see how they grew and developed as a character. Without a doubt, my favorite character was Constable Hammersmith, and if I continue the story, it will be to see more of him. There was just something about him that spoke to me, and I loved his character, even though he behaved and reacted to things in pretty much every way I would not. But it suited him, and I can't fault the man for being himself.
Inspector Day and Doctor Kingsley were really close second-place finishers, and I liked the way that they were open to new ideas and willing to go the extra mile to do what is right. The 'discovery' of fingerprints and its uses in investigations is a key element of this story, and I thought that it was handled well, despite being somewhat aggravated by the rejection of scientific advances by some of the characters, and even Kingsley himself, when dismissing certain things as unimportant that a modern reader would know is very important. But, they were learning and scientific discovery was not there yet, so it is what it is.
This is a police procedural wherein the procedure is somewhat maddening to modern readers, but it was still compelling and interesting to me. I like the beginnings of things, and so of course I liked that it included the beginnings of forensics, as well as a bit (JUST a bit) of criminal profiling, though not at all correct, but at least the inkling of the idea of trying to understand killers is established, instead of just treating them as something EVIL that just can't be understood, and SHOULDN'T be understood.
I also liked that, despite being set in Victorian England, this book WASN'T a Jack The Ripper story. He absolutely IS mentioned, and his legacy and presence are all throughout the book in various ways... but it isn't his story. This is a multifaceted story about a newly formed detective force figuring out how to do their jobs in a changing London, with any number of crimes being perpetrated at all hours. What's related? What's important? What should be important? What's even illegal? Who knows. That's all of the stuff they have to figure out as they go.
There were two murder investigations going on at the same time, though that wasn't apparent to the investigators until pretty late in the game. (I don't think that this is a spoiler, because it's obvious to the reader from ridiculously early that they were different). The #1 killer, though, was the least interesting and most predictable character in the book, in my opinion. We get to see the killer's perspective and thoughts, and it was pretty obvious to me what their motivation was, though the reveal in the book clearly is supposed to be a shocking twist. It wasn't really well handled, and was pretty inconsistent. But, that's almost beside the point. The point is the investigation, not the motivation.
Anyway, I had a few issues with it, but overall I liked the book, and maybe if Audible has a sale on book 2, I'll pick it up. I've definitely read worse books this week! :P