I think Graham Hurley writes some of the best British police procedurals and this is one of few Faraday/Winter series I'd not read. Faraday is an interesting character, a yin to Winter's yang and while working on the same case, or close to it, their paths seldom cross, being in different teams of the Portsmouth police. Consequently, there are separate narratives, something I've fond frustrating in other writers in recent years. And yet, Hurley pulls this off with such skill and continuity that it works brilliantly. And not only two narratives but other characters are on their own paths. Hurley also sets the case in a specific time, here the start of the UK invasion of Iraq in 2003, with the TV broadcasts, marches and protests. At the core is the 'war on drugs' and the death of a young man. Hurley doesn't flinch from moral arguments, is it better to legalise and control and maintain a loosing battle between the force of law and the gangs? It's an interesting series, well researched and the central characters feel real, with natural human failings. I don't know why it isn't more talked about it.