After the darkest of traumas experienced by DI Kim Stone and her team previously, Angela Marsons gives the reader a much needed breather with this, her 11th addition to this brilliant series. This is a series I read for the characters, the emotionally damaged Kim, and her team, the interactions and banter between them, all of whom I have come to care for. Plus, of course, for the well researched themes by Marsons, here, the topic of child prodigies, their impact on siblings, and their parents. Such gifted children, breathing the rarified air of being head and shoulders above their peers, and garnering the kind of attention it can be hard to live without as they become adults. A normal childhood is often a pipe dream for them, as can be socialising and having friends, and sibling relationships can result in bitter rivalries and resentment. Marsons looks at the parents, the quandary of just how far should they push their 'special' child, and 'tiger' parenting, more often than not built on a punitive system for the child to perform.
Kim and Kevin Bryant find themselves at the gruesome murder of a 61 year old Belinda Evans, a Child Psychology professor, at a playground park, secured to a swing with barbed wire, stabbed through the heart, with the letter X carved into the back of her neck. There are further murders with a similar MO that include a children's counsellor, and the original founder of Brainbox, which organises competitive events and quizzes for gifted children. Penn is in court accompanied by his old team members, the trial is expected to be a slam dunk affair, only for everything to disintegrate with the murder of a defense witness, and a prosecution witness that jeopardises the case and the career of DI Tom Travis. Penn is forced to painstakingly review the police case, only to find it riddled with serious problems which question the probity of the original investigation. Kim is convinced the killer will be at the Brainbox convention given all the victims are connected with it, so takes her team there, but danger awaits her and for Penn in his case.
As Kim implements orders from above to not push her team so hard and endanger their mental health, there are the comic repercussions of Kim and her team struggling to work normal hours, all their lives threaten to derail until they return to the long hours and intense pressure of their normal working lives. Penn's absence from the team results in the entry of the effusively cheerful and perky Tiffany, a new addition, whom the horrified Kim refers to as Tinkerbell or 'Tinks'. Tinks works with Stacey, who finds herself utterly surprised at how well they work together. This was a gloriously entertaining, and fun crime read, so great to catch up with Kim and her fabulous team, whilst at the same time appreciating in depth the strange world of gifted children, their parenting, and family dynamics. Looking forward to the next in the series! Many thanks to Bookouture for an ARC.