This series featuring Avon and Somerset's on the spectrum DS George Cross by Tim Sullivan is one that I have come to love. I listened to this addition on audio, 12 hours long and ably narrated by the wonderful Finlay Robertson, it's a terrific and suspenseful joy, one I can definitely recommend. Cross has an enviable record in the police force for solving cases with his relentless logic and unswerving determination, but his interactions with people can be problematic, to address this DS Josie Ottey works on improving his skills and Alice Mackenzie smooths his path. While both can find him infuriating, they have developed an affection for Cross, Alice, for example, goes over and beyond as can be seen when she pulls together a diverse group of her friends to help clear and deep clean the home of his hoarder father, Raymond, as he recovers from a fall in a care home.
A care home in which Cross meets retired former DCI Esther Moffat who is interested in his latest case. A young recovering addict mother, Felicity 'Flick' Wilson death has been ruled a suicide by the coroner, but her mother, Sandra, does not believe this, she is convinced she was murdered. A dignified Sandra has tried to convince the police of this, but has been turned away, dismissed as a grieving mother who cannot accept what her daughter did. That is until she bumps into Cross, who takes the time and trouble to listen to her, and upon visiting Flick's home, becomes convinced there are questions that need answers. So begins a complex investigation that initially his superiors are far from happy about, but this is Cross, he is not a man to be put off, as he looks into a wide cast of suspects, including the son of a owner of a drycleaners that Flick had worked for.
I think this is my favourite in this series, I love the blend of crime and insights into the relationships that revolve around Cross, I have come to adore Alice and Josie, and the insights into his personal life, such as his response to a mother he believes left him and his father when he was a child because she could not cope with him. The high regard that Cross is held in can be seen at the end at the organ recital in the church, the numbers that turn up to hear him play shocks him, and it includes a surprising presence. I can recommend this series, and this addition in particular, to all those who love the crime and mystery genre who have yet to discover the brilliant DS George Cross.