While murder mysteries with their dead victim hook and cast of suspects have been a core tenet of detective fiction since its inception in the 19th century, authors such as Harlan Coben and British bestseller Tim Weaver have shown that missing persons cases can create just as much drama. Years ago Coben told me in an interview that he found disappearances more interesting because of the uncertainty and lack of closure; and the hope that lingers can fuel those left behind, or crush them.
Weaver has leaned into that in his popular, long-running series starring missing persons expert David Raker. This intriguing twelfth instalment, The Last Goodbye, involves puzzling disappearances separated by nearly forty years. In the present, Tom Preacher and his nine-year-old son Leo enter a ghost house ride at the country’s newest theme park, then vanish. Video footage shows them going onto the ride, but never coming out the other end. Meanwhile Raker is hired by Rebekah Murphy, a British woman now living in New York, to dig into the disappearance of Rebekah’s mother back in 1985 – an old wound that has been reopened by recent letters. At the same time, the unwanted reappearance and remand of once-dead policeman Colm Healy may upturn Raker’s own life.
Already under great risk due to his past actions, Raker’s latest investigations prove more dangerous than even he could ever envisage, as his search grid unwittingly begins to entwine with perhaps his most vicious foe ever. A relic of a monstrous regime, the poisonous point of a broken spear.
Weaver lives up to his name well in The Last Goodbye, masterfully handling then bringing together a variety of fascinating threads that span time and geography. He lures the reader into an intriguing tale then ratchets up the tension as his long-time hero and others are thrust into dire jeopardy. Another very good instalment in a very good series, well worth a look for crime fiction fans.
[This review was first published in Deadly Pleasures, a US-based magazine]