France, 1976. Baptiste is an intelligent but somewhat naive detective, sent to work in Clermiers, a town filled with corruption. A girl goes missing, presumed dead after bloody clothes are found close to an illicit party near an abandoned chateau. Baptiste believes he's nailed the culprit, the eccentric Gilles Mailloux. When he appears in court, the public call for the guillotine - and that's the sentence Mailloux gets. But as Mailloux awaits an appeal for clemency, he asks to see Baptiste, who's still haunted by the fact the girl's body remains missing. As the clock ticks towards execution hour, Baptiste begins to realise he may have made a terrible mistake...
DAVID HEWSON was born in Yorkshire in 1953. His books range from the Nic Costa series set in Italy to adaptations of The Killing in Copenhagen and the Pieter Vos series in Amsterdam. He's adapted Shakespeare for Audible and in 2018 won the Audie for best original work for Romeo and Juliet: A Novel, narrated by Richard Armitage. 2019 sees the release of a new, full-cast Audible drama set in New York, Last Seen Wearing, and a standalone novel set in the Faroe Islands, Devil's Fjord.
Well at least it got better towards the end. Very average thriller exploiting the success of the TV series (which I loved). The writing is unexceptional and the plot twists are unsurprising. To some extent it reminded me of a Stephen King book set in small town America, but King writes so much better than this even when he produces the odd turkey (Fairy Tale springs to mind).It's okay as far as it goes but don't expect that you'll be desperately searching for other books by the author. Three stars is generous.
I really liked this book, I listened to the audio book and although it's long and sort of a slow burn, it pulled me in and I felt it would be a real page turner if I was reading it. The audio book was read by a French man and this made it really atmospheric. Some of the mistakes Baptiste makes had me shouting 'Noooo!!' at my car radio and some of it was shocking and had me shouting 'Mon Dieu!. Not my usual read, but I really enjoyed this one. I've read a couple of other books by David Hewson and enjoyed them all.
I would've liked to give this book 3.5 stars. It contained a lot of interesting historical information and a discussion of the difference between justice and the law. The usual power dynamics were present, but the story as a whole felt a little formulaic. Overall, it's a good enough beach read.
A slow start but if you're a fan of the series stick with it. It picks up and has the same back and forth pattern of the series whilst sticking very true to cannon