A superb story with a graphic and emotionally charged edge – highly recommended!
I came to the DI Bethany Smith series when I read book three ‘Red is the Colour’. In that earlier review I mentioned I’d get on and read the earlier ones, and this book is the start of the series, and it does set up the overall emotional vibe that resounded throughout book three. Cold is the Caller is a superb story with a very unexpected twist that will leave you stunned.
At its heart, the book is a graphic, visceral police procedural with an intriguingly tenacious and fallible central character DI Bethany Smith. Miss Ellis knows exactly how to balance the police’s operational lexicon with team-work and psychology game-plays. So many times, you read of a central hero or heroine being seemingly brilliant in everything, and although it may enable the character to squeeze out of those moments where they’re incarcerated within mental or even physical brick walls, it becomes a tad unrealistic. Thus, it’s very refreshing to read a character that’s immensely likable and obviously clever but due to the very nature of her high pressure job, she drops the ball at times. One such occurrence happens mid-way through the story, Bethany is suffering from information overload and contacts a fellow colleague, DI Tracy Collier from Serious Crimes. Collier’s acerbic, just skirting bitchy, nevertheless she helps Bethany, pointing out something that’s straight in front of her, but afterward, Bethany feels stupid and inadequate. Collier hears her, but then in a show of camaraderie, says it’s just part of the job, accept it, don’t beat yourself up and move on to get those results. It’s that injection of motivation that Bethany needs to close the case.
Miss Ellis’ books in this series always have two POVs, Bethany and the killer’s. It feels like a brutal cat and mouse chase. Getting into the mind of a murderer, giving nods to possible rationales for their behaviour, whilst showing their insanity from the way they view the world around them, and particularly the warped perspective they have for their victims, isn’t easy at all, if it’s to be done in an authentic, realistic way. And Miss Ellis achieves this in spades.
The murders in Miss Ellis’ books are set pieces in themselves. Sick, gory and delightfully crafted, one could even imagine the author sits in her home and imagines ways in which to make readers truly shocked. I don’t shock easily, but I found the murders inventive and dare I say, innovative in their nature. Clearly the work of a deeply twisted mind, out for vengeance against another scandalous crime that had been committed.
There is a central trait within this series, and that is the powerful connection of family, and the damage that family can do that can lead to savage retribution, insanity and death. Had the murderer gone through a different upbringing, would they have still killed? Or was the path to insanity ingrained within their DNA? That age old argument of nature v nurture?
Miss Ellis investigates such deep questions, but she does so with humorous flair and panache, that makes this book engrossing as much as it is disturbing. The balance of Bethany and her team gives the story its ray of metaphorical sunshine, demonstrating through sheer tenacity and absolute conviction, that amazing things can be achieved by real (as opposed to superhuman) people.
I loved this book and I would urge you if you haven’t given Miss Ellis’ incredible story-telling a go then you are only denying yourself. Recommended unreservedly.