Resolution completes the trilogy featuring Maureen O'Donnell of Glasgow, Scotland. She's emotionally fragile, having survived childhood incest pepetrated by her father Michael and the recent murder of her married lover Douglas. Now Douglas's accused murderer is going on trial, but he may be trying to set himself up for an insanity defense by driving her crazy. Maureen has been living off money that Douglas gave her before his death, but that has pretty much run out. She and her best friend Leslie -- fired from her job at the women's shelter -- run a stall in a flea market selling illegal cigarettes. They meet another stallholder, Ella McGee, who has been a prostitute in her youth. Ella's two adult children, Simon and Margaret, have thrived through criminal pursuits; and she works for them part-time in a high-end brothel they own. The reader knows about her sinister family life, but Maureen is in the dark until Ella ends up in the hospital, the victim of a savage beating, where she dies unexpectedly. Immediately, Maureen suspects Ella's son, and with good reason. Resolution reveals that Maureen's alcohol abuse has worsened, but she's still hanging on, searching for answers to Ella's death and preparing for the trial of psychotherapist Angus Farrell. In the process Maureen, Leslie, and Kilty discover the secrets behind Simon's business. And there's some happy news for Maureen. She seems to be reconnecting with her boyfriend from Exile, Vikram.
Resolution brings the series to a satisfying conclusion. No spoiler alerts, but after a lot of extreme violence and dangerous situations, Maureen seems to be getting her life back on track. And a lot of bad people get their comeuppance. Mina has mastered gritty storytelling, set in drab working class neighborhoods, and populated with some very unsavory characters. But she also finds humanity and kindness in unexpected places. I read this book slowly, wanting to prolong my relationship with Maureen, but in the end Mina brought all of the plot threads together and I was ready for it to end. It was time to send Maureen on her way. I hope that she's out there somewhere, doing just fine. I like to think so.