Not my favorite in this series and I will tell you why...
Someone is killing young women, someone very difficult to pin down and find. Chief Superintendent Simon Serailler, is tasked with finding out who, why, how, and all of that. BUT...
A good chunk of the book isn't about the crime or the criminal case, tracking him/her/them down. It focuses on Simon and the various crises in his life. With his beloved mother recently deceased, his father now has a new girl friend. And Simon hates it. (OMG! How dare anyone date or love again after losing a spouse!) There's another close family member who's very sick very suddenly. PLUS, an old love might come back - if Simon will allow it. Hell, it's just hell to be Simon in this book. When he's needed by his family, he's usually off chasing this darn murderer. Such is life. Or life as a beleaguered character in a book.
Ms. Hill is able to elicit a huge emotional response though. She's writes human relations, life and all its tragedies as well as the best writers. In this regard she's right up there with Ruth Rendell, PD James, Elizabeth George and others. She digs so deep you want to make her stop. But the story fails, IMO, because it's not about an investigation so much as it is about Simon.
One other thing: there is an obvious theme connecting all the murders as they continue to pile up. Why NOT ONE person on Simon's investigative team, or Simon - brilliant as he is - saw the connection, I just do not know. When finally someone gets the light bulb to turn on (over their head) I'm sitting in my chair yawning: yep, you is all just characters in a book, but how the heck did you all turn so stupid?
haha, I still enjoy Ms. Hill's writing and some of her books are among my favorites.
Just not this one.
Three stars, C-