Somber and Complicated
When a thriller depicting the death of a real-life missing person is discovered in the archives of a recently passed thriller writer, the case is directed to the Historic Cases Unit under DCI Karen Pirie.
Past Lying is the seventh book in the Karen Pirie series and can be read as a standalone.
The narrative picks up a few weeks after the ending of book #6 in early 2020 in Edinburgh during the start of the first COVID lockdown. The characters grapple with obeying the rules of lockdown, the fear of the unknown, and the trauma of having a loved one infected with COVID. This aspect of the novel is emotional, as McDermind manages to capture what it felt like in the early days of lockdown. The setting also matches the morose tone, as the streets of Edinburgh are dark and bare. Although I didn’t want to visit that time again, McDermid approached it with sensitivity.
The plot revolves around the mystery of a missing girl whose disappearance is somehow enmeshed in an unpublished crime mystery titled The Vanishing of Laurel Oliver. To determine if the fiction mirrors reality, Karen and her team immerse themselves in the novel. The reader also gets to read the manuscript, turning this into a mystery within a mystery. Sometimes, I find that the book within a book structure doesn’t work, but in this case, the manuscript is gripping, and it both fuels and adds to the central mystery.
POVs are shared from Karen, Sergeant ,Daisy, and Jason aka., The Mint. All are fleshed out and distinct, and the shifts in POV are well-balanced. There are a few others mixed in, but they were not necessary. In this installment, Karen and Daisy are a little too self-righteous and judgemental. Karen is especially overbearing; I have never felt this way about her character before, and I need her to ease up a bit. Jason is as lovely and innocent as ever. He adds a nice bit of humor, but his storyline also involves some chaos and sadness.
There are a lot of layers to unpack between the character dynamics, mystery, and COVID. The plotting is intricate and well-balanced. The pacing is slow, but it works in conjunction with the multiple plotlines. Thankfully, the final chapter pushes forward a year, and it looks like most characters have recovered from their COVID-related trauma.
Overall, this is another solid addition to the Karen Pirie series.
I received a complimentary copy of this book from NetGalley and Grove Atlantic in exchange for an honest review.