I love the way Stephen Booth has woven area history into his fourth Cooper & Fry mystery, Blind to the Bones. England's Peak District is incredibly beautiful, but the tiny village of Withens, tucked away in a fold of the landscape, seems to have been tarred with the ugly brush, and it's got everything to do with the building of the railway, its tunnels, and how the workers were treated. Withens is a place that's isolated by history and topography, and the Oxley family takes that isolation to the furthest extreme possible. Reading about Withens gave me the creeps.
The setting, the history, and the mystery are first-rate. Booth really had me scratching my head, trying to figure out what was going on and who was responsible. Front and center are police officers Diane Fry and Ben Cooper. Diane is the outsider. You've heard of Type A people? Well, Diane Cooper is Type AAA, and she and DC Ben Cooper, an easy-going local lad, are like chalk and cheese. Every time Cooper has to deal with Fry, he feels like he's barely survived a life-threatening situation. Fry's concentration on the missing Emma Renshaw dredges up painful memories of the disappearance of her own sister while Cooper's attempts at solving the string of thefts has him being sent time after time after time to try to wrest any tidbit of information from the Oxleys, something that becomes a running joke in the book.
There is a lot to like about this book and this series, and it's a favorite of several of my friends. However, for some strange reason that I cannot put my finger on, I just can't warm up to Diane Fry and Ben Cooper. I love the Peak District, but I've given it four books for me to warm up to these characters, and it's not working. It's time to move on. But don't let that keep you from meeting Cooper and Fry. As I said, several of my friends love it, and there's no reason why you can't, too.