När ett par dykare upptäcker kvarlevorna av en människa i ett hus som för många år sedan sattes under vatten vid tillkomsten av en reservoar, får den pensionerade kriminalare som en gång utredde offrets försvinnande sina värsta misstankar besannade: Helena Warner, studerande vid Somerville College i Oxford, blev mördad, och tre av hennes närmaste vänner hjälptes åt att skydda mördarens identitet. När Bill Driver är tillbaka på spåret slår mördaren till igen, och Driver inser att om han skall kunna förhindra ytterligare dödsfall måste han försöka förstå de besynnerliga, dunkla band som knyter samman Helenas tre vänner och får dem att hålla tyst. Och han är fast besluten att uppfylla sitt löfte för tjugo år sedan: "Jag ska knäcka dig". Kanske inte idag och kanske inte på många år ännu, men en dag ska jag knäcka dig ... Julia Wallis Martin har blivit prisad som en ny, stor talang inom sofistikerad kriminallitteratur. Porträtt i sten är hennes debut.
Waarom heb ik nog niet eerder iemand over dit boek gehoord? Wat ben ik blij dat ik m bij de kringloop tegen kwam! Een mysterieus verhaal waarbij de spanning stukje bij beetje opgebouwd wordt. Het begin was even wat vaagjes door de vele personages waar je achter elkaar kennis mee maakt, maar uiteindelijk vallen alle puzzelstukjes in elkaar en zie je de verbanden.
Since moving into double digits many years ago, i've never really missed having pictures in the books I read...until now. While this is a solid, fast paced mystery that isn't quite as 'what you see is what you get' as it might appear for the first four fifths of the book, I can't help but think that to appreciate the full impact of the ending, it really should be on screen (as I know it has been). The ending left me somewhat hollow - so much so that I actually went back and re-read the last 20 or so pages thinking that I'd missed something. Not that I didn't get it - I just felt that the impact should have been more. Which is where the visual would, in this case, have triumphed over the word.
The other issue I have is with the characters. While I appreciate that characters require faults to make them seem more real, I couldn't actually find anything about any of them that I liked. There was no one I was invested in, that I wanted to see things done right by.
That said, it did keep my interest from start to finish and the story moves along at a great pace. I will give another one of the author's books a try and see how it compares.
Martin starts the novel with an opening scene like none I've ever read. Eerie and captivating.
The book is extraordinarily well written. Creepy, with tenticles of prose wrapping around you and pulling you in like the ivy, or marsh reeds so prevalent in the story.
Any reader versed in mystery fiction will know from the beginning that things aren't as simple as they seem. Yet, even with that knoweldge, even being correct in that knowledge, Julia Wallis Martin manages to pull of a twist ending.
While not quite a "fair play" mystery, there are clues enough, hints, woven among the details.
Multiple perspectives, a staunch part of many mystery novels, is pulled off brilliantly, without giving anything away.
The setting is haunting, creepy (yes, there's that word again, so very apt) dark and as mysterious as the cold case being revealed in the present.
My only criticism is that the police officers were difficult to distinguish one from the other. A minor detail that would have most likely been worked out if there had been subsequent entries into a series. Alas, it's a stand alone..but perhaps that's ok as I need a light, cozy mytery as a palate cleanser after this dark one.
The cover of my copy would deter anyone from buying it. A reservoir has produced bodies in other crime stories - in one case, in a car, another, when the water dried up. Here, a diver enters a submerged house and finds a body in a wardrobe. This unlikely scenario rings a bell with someone who investigated a disappearance years ago. We skip back and forth to twenty years ago when the water was rising. Quite practically we are told that the weather and outdoor work had killed a farmer, the cold, wet, seasons, the need to keep up with the bank. A maniac kills a woman and refers to having killed an animal as well. Can we please stop the cruelty to animals in fiction. Loses a star.
Near Oxford, England new reservoir was created over a house. When, 20 years later, two divers on a lark swim through the house, they open a closet door and find a body. The body was the case that had bothered Bill Driver even after he retired from the police force. The discovery of the body brought back 20 years of memories for everyone concerned. This story is not my normal cup of tea but was a well crafted and different plot.
Retired detective Bill Driver is called back to a cold case when divers discover the body of a young woman, Helena Warner, who was reported missing 20 years earlier. Her body was found in a house that had been inundated by a reservoir, and Driver believed she had been murdered, but without a body there was insufficient evidence.
Eventually the mystery is solved, but not in the way Bill Driver expected.
It has got a good plot. Only if the start was a little faster, i would have enjoyed the book more. At one point, I had put the book down getting disappointed that why would the author even bother to write such a thing. However, when you come to this point, keep reading, it gets interesting from here.
This was an ok story. I felt myself rushing through it to get to the end so I could start another book so it is safe to say that this story didn't exactly grab me. I would have given this 2 stars however I did enjoy the descriptions of the settings and the eventual revelations of the murderer.
A clever mystery in which two different time frames are integrated perfectly. The main characters are unique and yet it is easy to see similarities to real people in them.
This was a fascinating and suble mystery. A cold case was reopened. The retired detective who originally worked on the crime was sure he knew who did it, but could the police get the evidence to prove it this time round? It was a psychological study as much as anything else, partly looking at the effects of living with guilt as well as the cat and mouse games played by the police to try to prove once and for all who was guilty.
Very engaging read. Early on the book reveals the alleged killer and then takes the reader through the process of trying to find motivation and evidence to prove it. Well written and fairly smooth transitions between present day and flashbacks of the cold case murder. But, just as you feel the pieces are falling into place Martin throws in a great twist to the ending. It's been awhile since I've found a book I couldn't put down.
This was on my to-read list for years and I've finally checked it off. I liked the story, but I had a difficult time connecting with the characters; they felt incomplete to me. I would have liked more depth to them.
That said, the plot was intriguing enough to keep me turning the pages and I am willing to try another book by the author.
Dark and compelling. NOT a "cozy" British mystery despite the setting. (Oxford, Thames Valley police) Changes POV often but usually skillfully (some transitions were clunkier than others). Some plot threads left dangling but the ultimate bad guy in the book was one of the most depraved and chilling I've ever read about. Nightmare material!
It started out ok... I liked that it was clear from the beginning who the killer was, and rather than being a mystery story, it was a gentle unfolding of motive (I hate not knowing what's going on). Then in the last chapter the killer was someone else. Rubbish.
Oh I just landed upon this author - I ADORED her work, atmospheric, and unputdownable - I hoped when I saw this that she'd been writing a whole lot more, but alas it looks like nothing in a long while. I highly recommend if you enjoy the Minette Walters, Nickki French style of mystery/thriller!!
Ian Gilmore’s jealous attack on his two-timing girlfriend leaves her dead, he thinks, and his friends collude to hide her remains and cover for him. Twenty years later, her body is found, and the detective who has haunted Gilmore all this time returns to reopen the investigation.
first book I have read by this author and it wasn't bad.it's an omnibus book so right into reading second so will have more of a feel for their writing after.
A creepy mystery - definitely a good writer with a very conversational yet sophisticated style. Could be macabre for people who like their mysteries bloodless a la Christie..