Barry Maitland's first mystery, The Marx Sisters, won fans with its intricate plotting and charming characters, Kathy and Brock. Now, in The Malcontenta, Maitland has honed his mystery-weaving skills and created a nuanced, complex new thriller. Kathy has been reassigned to Family and Juvenile Crime and sent by her new boss to investigate an apparent suicide at a local "naturopath" spa. She can tell right away that there is a cover-up in process and calls on Brock for help. When Brock checks himself in as a patient, they both learn that spas are not always beneficial for one's health -- especially if you're a target for murder.
Barry Maitland is the author of the acclaimed Brock and Kolla series of crime mystery novels, which are set in London, where Barry grew up after his family moved there.
His books have been described as whydunits as much as whodunits, concerned with the devious histories and motivations of their characters. Barry's background in architecture drew him to the structured character of the mystery novel, and his books are notable for their ingenious plots as well as for their atmospheric settings, each in a different intriguing corner of London.
Barry studied architecture at Cambridge University, and went on to work as an architect in the UK, then took a PhD in urban design at the University of Sheffield, where he also taught and wrote a number of books on architecture and urban design. In 1984 he moved to Australia to head the architecture school at the University of Newcastle in New South Wales, and held that position until 2000. He now writes fiction full time, and lives in the Hunter Valley, Australia.
Detective Sergeant Kathy Kolla and Detective Chief Inspector David Brock made a wonderful team when they worked on their first case together in The Marx Sisters. They had a synergy that allowed them to combine efficiently while working on the case. They return in another tense police procedural and that good relationship will be required again in The Malcontenta as Kolla faces a particularly frustrating case.
The story opens with a very perturbed Kathy Kolla making her way to DCI Brock's house to seek his advice. Brock, who is a highly regarded Scotland Yard detective, has been on leave as he prepares a paper for a conference in Rome and so is removed from the day to day police-work. DS Kolla usually works at the London Met but has been sent to the Southern Counties for a year's secondment possibly as a punishment for the events detailed in The Marx Sisters.
The case in question is the apparent suicide of a man employed at Stanhope Naturopath Clinic, a health farm style complex that basks in its isolation. The director of the clinic seems particularly reluctant to help with providing any information and in fact, even hinders the case. This is annoying and perhaps even a little suspicious but she receives a shock to be confronted and berated by the Deputy Chief Constable who happened to be staying at the clinic.
The Deputy Chief Constable's wrath notwithstanding, she carries on and begins to make progress on the case, suspecting strongly that the suicide is in fact a murder. Just when real breakthroughs are being made she and the constable she is working with are hauled into their superior's office, taken off the case and warned to leave the people from the clinic alone.
Sensing that there is some sort of cover-up going on and determined to find out what it is, it's at this point that she turns to Brock to see if he could come up with a plan. He can, an undercover operation, completely unofficial and against the rules, where he would pose as a patient and enter Stanhope himself. The results are not exactly what Kolla or Brock would have hoped for, but their actions certainly stir things into a delightful frenzy.
Starting off slowly as many police procedurals tend to do, the story builds in intensity developing a distinct us versus them feeling. Once the initial crime has been laid out for us and the main characters (suspects) are introduced, they are almost disregarded as the more troubling interference and discipline from within the police force takes over.
As readers we are kept in the dark during most of The Malcontenta just as the protagonists are. We are just as confused as Kolla and Brock when the case goes spinning out of control and there is a continuing sense of injustice about the events, even a feeling of outrage at the treatment that's being handed out. Barry Maitland has done a superb job of drawing me into the story by playing upon my own emotions, putting me in Kathy Kolla's predicament and effectively asking how I would feel in the same situation. It's a style that gave me the feeling that I held a stake in the outcome.
The Malcontenta is a strong follow-up to The Marx Sisters firmly establishing the partnership that was formed between DS Kolla and DCI Brock. We are given the benefit of learning a little more about both of them although the character development is probably the least strong aspect of the book. At this point I think they are still far from fully formed characters with the concentration placed more on their handling of the case. In particular it seems to me that Brock is yet to reach his full potential.
Insightful detective work while facing possibly career destroying opposition carries the story and is made consistently interesting by changing the lead character, first Kathy Kolla and then David Brock. Barry Maitland is definitely an author to follow for those who enjoy strong police procedurals.
First off, didn't like this one nearly as much as Book #1. (However, I will continue in the series as I do like the two main MC's, Cathy Kolla and David Brock.)
Kolla has been sort-of-demoted - 'seconded' - and pushed off to a rural area while those above her decide her fate. She's stepped on, pushed aside, insulted, patronized and condescended to by her superiors at every possible moment. Okay, whatever. But she just lets it happen? And complains, but only to those who don't matter. So at the very start I was: What's up with this??
(Has she no union? No lawyer? No worker's representative of some kind? I've never seen a police officer be so shoved and pushed around; she barely nudges back. Am I too American? Nope, nope, nope. We women haven't been laying down and letting men-folk walk all over us until the year 2012 or so. I was a young woman teacher in 1974 and let me tell you...)
Anyhow, her strategy is to lay low, let things happen, she'll recover, somehow, some time. So when she's sent to investigate a possible suicide at a health-type weird resort out in the British sticks, and quickly sees signs that this is MORE than a possible suicide...
She does what she's trained to do, sees inconsistencies in the 'official conclusion' that the young man in question did kill himself. When she brings this up, all sort of sh-- falls on her. Mostly from her superiors. So she takes the case to Kevin Brock - who's not officially involved in any of this - and tells him all about it
Then even more sh-- hits the proverbial fans. I did like the part where Brock goes undercover at the health resort but all the way through this book I'm thinking, What? WHAT? Who treats cops that way? (The ordinary public, that's who, but it seems like every high-ranking inspector or administrator, and I forget all their titles, is a first-class jackass.) Nobody listens to Kolla. Nobody much cares what happens to Brock.
The story itself is also a bit convoluted, the kind where some readers may want to re-read sections, and I was left with a dozen unanswered questions at the end. If I were living in England maybe I'd say, yeah, yeah, they're all like that. (They = high ranking officials of any and all kinds.) But maybe not. I just felt let down after the first book, which was exemplary in almost every way. Plus, there are too many coincidences, including one involving a woman living in Italy who just happens to know so much about so much, and the fact that Brock just happens to be going to Rome to deliver a speech at a conference. Yeah, okay.
Author Barry Maitland simply possesses too much talent. Thanks to him, I completely neglected so much that I had to accomplish over the two days that it took me to devour the 348 pages of The Malcontenta.
The suspense builds from the first few pages. Sergeant Kathy Kolla, physically if not mentally recovered from her experience in The Marx Sisters, visits Detective Chief Inspector David Brock of Scotland Yard at his London home. Kolla, spending a year on special assignment in an unspecified county in English's South, reveals to Brock the details of an investigation into a suicide at a health farm. She's certain that the death was no suicide, and that her superiors -- for some reason(s) -- have launched a cover-up. On the sly, Kolla and Brock continue looking into the death. The suspense will keep you glued to the book -- while everything and everyone else -- must wait till you savor the last page.
You won't want to miss The Malcontenta; just tackle the novel when it won't disrupt your life too much! And be sure to have the next novel in the series, All My Enemies, near at hand. If you're like me, you won't want to wait long before catching up with Kathy and David again.
A special thanks to my Goodreads friend from Down Under, Magda, who provided me a list of Australian authors that aren't to be missed. Maitland is a jewel I likely would not have experienced without you!
I had forgotten how much I enjoyed the first book in this series until I started this one. This time the action revolves around a naturopathic spa, where Detective Kathy Kolla is sent to investigate an apparent suicide. What she finds there arouses her suspicions, and sends her off to visit David Brock of Scotland Yard, seeking his opinion and guidance, and pulling him into the investigation. The author does a good job building suspense and adding layers to the story.
The last time I read about a naturopathic spa, it was in Thunderball. I guess naturopathic spas are like a thing in mystery novels? Who knew?
In this spa, an employee has been killed and Detective Chief Inspector David Brock goes undercover to the spa where they deprive him of, well, everything in order to release the toxins from his system. There's not as much involving Sergeant Kathy Kolla in this book, which was interesting since the first book, The Marx Sisters, featured her so predominantly. (I still picture Brock as Bobby Goren.) When we do see Kolla in this one, she's primarily stuffing food in her mouth.
The story is told in a sort of backwards chronology, which took me a bit to figure out. At first I just thought I was having difficulty getting into the story. I can't say the characters were really fleshed out well, but then again, who reads these books for the character development? In fact, there is some development, we start to kind of get an idea of what makes Brock tick, so that's something. But the supporting cast of characters are all pretty one-dimensional (except when convenient for plot enhancement) and I admit to getting a few names confused in my head. Because I'm a lazy reader, I guess.
Still, fun. Bloodier than Thunderball. So if you like a little blood in your naturopathic spa settings, then I recommend this one.
Rating is rounded up from an actual 2 & 1/2 stars due to good writing which kept me turning the pages, despite many serious flaws in the plot and action. Point #1: No cause of death ever definitively given for physio-trainer, who "officially" committed suicide. (The cause is finally revealed months later, but no reason is given for why the pathologist would have connived at the cover-up.) Point #2: The psychopathic killer would not have left Brock alive while he was in the same room with the second victim as the murder was committed, even if he was unconscious. Point 3: The atmosphere of dread in the house, grounds and Temple of Apollo is never adequately explained. And that's just three points; there are several more. Just as an aside, what is up with Brits being so into S&M? I have read at least three novels where that forms the background of several extremely grotesque murders. I wish they'd move on to something less revolting! The story followed many rabbits down the hole which always turned out to be a dead end. Ultimately, I was surprised by the actual killer, but dissatisfied by the conclusion because it came after so many alternative choices. Also, the clunky technology available just 20 or so years ago was amusing to recall, even by me, a techno-idiot!
The 2nd of Barry Maitland's Brock & Kolla series, 'The Malcontenta' is a fairly tidy Brit procedural with likeable main characters. It begins with DS Kathy Kolla, on loan to a rural force from Metro London, calling on her old boss David Brock for some help. It seems she'd been assigned by her ball-buster of a temporary leader to investigate what seemed to be an open & shut suicide case at a nearby health resort. She'd discovered some anomalies but had been banished from the case for unknown (to her) reasons. Brock, himself temporarily on leave in order to prepare for an upcoming presentation at an international policing conference in Rome, takes on a voluntary, unauthorized undercover assignment, checking into the health farm to poke around.
The more that Brock investigates and the more Kolla discovers, the blurrier the victim, a Greek immigrant working as a 'physio' at the facility, becomes. He'd been found hung in a spooky room in an old building with odd injuries, strange leather clothing, and evidence that he didn't die there. Who was he? Straight? Gay? Who was he friends with? Were drugs involved? Adding to the confusion was the imperious nature of the lead physician on-site, his ice-queen wife, and the squirrelly behavior of several of the staff members and other patients. Dogged police work as well as a bit of luck Brock experiences during his Italian getaway eventually nails the killer, and it's not one that was an obvious suspect.
I've bounced around in the B&K series and enjoy the writing, the pace of the stories, and the characters. You won't see a lot of violence, sex, car chases, and so forth but you'll get a taste of solid police procedures, teamwork, and one thing I always look for: differences between US and English police work. I docked this a star for my lack of belief in some of Brock's actions during the investigation, but otherwise it's a fine entry in the series.
I just didn't care for the setup of the book, but I'm guessing the author did not frame the story in chronological order because then Brock would not make an appearance until halfway through the book.
I began to enjoy the book better when reaching the point where Brock was at the health facility. Despite the seriousness of the story, the character always finds spots to make the reader smile or laugh. I really enjoy his character more than Kathy who seems to radiate negativity. And I definitely like when Brock and Kathy are working together best, so, for me, the story improves again from the Italy section onward.
Is Kathy going to be seriously injured at the end of every book? I hope not because then author is in serious danger of turning the series into a farce. I also hope the author isn't compelled to push her into a relationship. Patrick seemed like a nice guy, but I detected no real spark between him and Kathy. And the architect from the first book was just plain awful. In fact, the person Kathy gels with perfectly is Brock. I'm not convinced, however, that Barry Maitland would risk messing up their partnership. Too bad, because Brock definitely has feelings for Kathy. He's always wishing he were twenty years younger. So if Maitland avoids the Brock/Kathy route, I just hope he doesn't muck up Kathy's personal life too badly.
I'd like to get to know Brock better outside of work. We've gotten glimpses of Kathy's life, but not much of Brock.
I'll keep reading the series and hope the next entry involves a more interesting setting, like book one. The whole health clinic and cult-like characters were a turn off for me. I'm also hopeful Kathy will be back in London and working with Brock in an official capacity in the next book.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Il romanzo è sostanzialmente diviso in tre parti: l’inizio dell’indagine del sergente Kolla in una clinica alternativa situata in una bellissima villa palladiana, le investigazioni da infiltrato dell’ispettore capo Brock, e infine, insieme, arrivano alla spiegazione dei fatti con l’epilogo. Senza l’ultima parte avrei dato un ottimo voto: descrizioni belle senza essere prolisse, un’indagine che fin da subito si rivela essere più complicata del previsto, buona caratterizzazione dei personaggi, alcune scene ad effetto. Poi crolla tutto, crolla in moventi e azioni poco sensati, confessioni strampalate, senza veri motivi che spingano alla confessione stessa (e allora perché non tacere invece di confessare tutto?), cattivi sempre più cattivi quando già si intuiva che potessero essere cattivi perché già si comportavano da cattivi…. L’ultimo capitolo, per ragioni differenti ma non voglio spoilerare, è al tempo stesso prevedibile e improbabile; la festa? Boh, a me non sembravano belle persone.
After reading Mr. Maitland's first book, The Marx Sisters, I decided I wanted to read more of this series. This second book, to me, was just as compelling as the first. I particularly like the characters of Detective Kathy Kolla and Chief Inspector David Brock but I think that all his characters are well drawn and interesting. In this particular case, the death of a young man who seems to be a favorite of many at the naturopath spa where he worked doesn't seem to be quite the simple suicide that everyone wants them to believe. When Detective Kolla pushes for more investigation she is thrown off the case. When she talks to her friend Brock, they come up with a plan to let him do a little undercover work to find out what's really going on. Great read...on to the 3rd book!
I'm not keen on this cop bullied by colleagues things. Or cop with corrupt colleagues.
Here we have both.
Kolla has been pushed off to a rural area while those above her decide her fate. And she just lets it happen
Anyhow, her strategy is to let things happen, it will be ok eventually.. So when she's sent to investigate a possible suicide at a health-type weird resort She takes the case to Kevin Brock - who's not officially involved in any of this - and tells him all about it
Then Brock goes undercover at the health resort but Who treats cops that Nobody listens to Kolla. Nobody much cares what happens to Brock.
I found it hard to care about any of the characters.
And the ending? Ridiculous. I won't be reading more of this series.
I quite like DS Kolla and DCI Brock. Good story and style. I read #1 (The Marx Sisters) awhile ago and liked it, but now I have renewed interest and I have the whole series to wade through ...bought from the library’s withdrawn sale because they hadn’t been checking out. Some British authors move well here in the U.S. but others who are just as good don’t...possibly due to publicity given or not given. Also he hadn’t added to the series since 2013 and now I just found that a new one finally came out in 2019! So, if you are into British police procedurals and are not familiar with Maitland, give him a try.
Kathy Kolla was assigned to investigate a suicide at Stanhope Clinic - it when she arrives she realises this suicide may in fact be a murder. The victim, Alex Petrou, was a physiotherapist at the clinic and his character received a mixed review from the patients. But during the investigation Kathy did something which has landed her in trouble and so she seeks David Brock’s advice on how to proceed. This is where this book opens and as always you can never tell how it will end.
I like this series. The books are easy to read yet engaging. I will definitely continue to read this series.
This very solid police procedural has a pair of likable protagonists and an interesting plot. I highly recommend it, and the only reason I didn't give it a fourth star is that the plot twists aren't quite enough to prevent you from easily guessing who did it based on first impressions and personality types. Although this is #2 in the series, knowledge of the first story isn't needed to enjoy this one. (My local library didn't have #1.)
I loved The Marx Sisters, the first Brock and Kolla mystery. The malcontenta lacks the wonderful sense of place that Maitland applied in the first novel. I found the plot a bit convoluted, and I needed to suspend disbelief with a few plot twists. I certainly will not be checking into any health spas in the near future! However, I love the two lead characters and their mutual respect and work ethic. Brock and Kolla are fine companions and I will continue to read their further adventures.
A body is discovered at a health resort, and Detective Sergeant Kathy Kolla is assigned the case. It looks like a suicide by hanging, but it also looks staged. For some reason, her supervisor becomes very antagonistic when she wants to pursue the possibility that this is a murder.
Lots of potential suspects, red herrings, and clues. The main characters are pretty average humans and don't especially stand out, but it's still a pretty good murder mystery nonetheless.
Lots of twists and variety as Kathy conducts an initial police investigation into a suspicious death at a clinic, and then Brock goes undercover unofficially as a patient, together with a section set in Italy. I'm keen to keep reading these. My only quibble? Brock didn't complain anything like as much as he should have about his three day fast.
Just finished this thriller of a story, and although it was quite dark (for me) it built up in the suspense before the final ending. This would not be a plot I would normally read, but once you get into the story it is hard to put down. I will continue with this series because it is that good.
I enjoyed this book very much. It was a fun easy read with interesting characters. This is my first Brock and Kolla, but I will search out more. I liked the setting and the mystery, and didn't figure it out, too many people could have done it.
An excellent police procedural, which almost had a hint of cozy-mystery with the section set in a health spa, but the number of murders put paid to that idea! Good pace and a gripping ending.