Wednesday’s child is full of woe…. From a children’s nursery rhyme
In this sixth novel in Peter Robinson’s DCI Alan Banks series, the titular Wednesday’s child is Gemma Scupham, a pitiful 7-year-old, long abandoned by her father and woefully neglected by her blowsy, self-centered mother, Brenda Scupham. When a man and a woman passing themselves off as social workers come to the Scruphams’ dirty flat and remove Gemma overnight — or so they say, Brenda, ignorant and automatically deferential to authority — doesn’t object. Indeed, she nevers bothers to call until hours after the duo said they’d return Gemma.
Haunted by his memories of the Moors Murders of 1965, when he was at the scene at Saddleworth Moor as the body of Lesley Anne Downey was unearthed,* Superintendent Gristhorpe takes a much more active role in this investigation. It was wonderful to see him come to the fore, as he and Banks try to find Gemma before it’s too late. Readers will find themselves glued to this riveting novel until the very last few paragraphs — and what could be a better recommendation for a suspenseful police procedural than that? Wednesday’s Child is the best book in this series — and that’s saying something!
* While, of course, Gemma Scupham and the events of Wednesday’s Child are fictional, Gristhorpe frequently refers to the real-life murder victim, the cherubic Lesley Anne, and the murdering couple of Myra Hindley and Ian Brady, who confessed to killing Lesley Ann and four other children from Greater Manchester.