I heard about the book/series on LibraryThing. I Enjoy mysteries and having lived in Turkey for 3 years when I was a kid, I had to give it a try.
I enjoyed it, but the book does have some big flaws, and at least at the start of the series it does not live up to the banner on the cover "The Donna Leon of Istanbul".
The book was well written and meaty. I really like books that delve into what the characters are thinking, and their past, and why they are acting as they are. Nadel does that well, but perhaps goes into too much depth, because the story started to drag in the middle. The whole thing could have been tightened up and cut down in terms of page count.
There was also a lot of repetitive internal worrying by one of the main characters, Robert, it got boring. We seemed to follow him while he did the same things, and had the same thoughts over and over. Many of the other characters had a similar problem: this one was dominated by his mother, this one was randy, this one was a complaining wife. When the character was on stage it was the same theme with just the details changed. I didn't feel they were really fleshed out, and they were lacking in shading.
The main police character seemed to me to be unrealistic in the sense that he wandered around drinking openly from a bottle of booze. He did it in his office, he did it at crime scenes, and he did it when visiting suspects/witnesses to question them. It isn't the Muslim-alcohol (alcohol is allowed in Turkey) issue that bothers me, as the idea that the police force there has no rules or standards of behavior and that the public actions wouldn't draw unwanted outside attention (citizens, religious authorities, press).
In general all the characters seemed to be unlikeable and flat. They also used British-isms in their dialog and thoughts, so I never felt they were actually Turkish so much as reflecting the author's origin. The description of the city was so-so, with not a lot done to express it as an exotic foreign place other than that it had dark twisty alleys, and sections with unpronounceable names. A pronunciation guide would have been helpful overall, I knew some but was not sure of others.
The mystery was OK. There was a lot of pointless wandering in terms of the police solving it, and the suspects waiting for the other shoe to drop. As soon as it was presented that the suspect family was Russian and there was a tie back to the revolution it was clear to me what the mystery was. Nadel seems to be of the Alexanda-is-the-root-of-all-evil camp, which does not please me with its inherent sexism, and nationalism. The author also pulled a fast one by making a character magically exist when the murder was explained. There was a brief foreshadowing of the character's existence, but it was not done properly.
The ending has many explanations so the reader knows more than the police. It is explained, but not really wrapped up. I was fine with it. It seemed to address both schools of ending: those who want completion, and those who don't want a pat ending. Purists in either camp may be unsatisfied.
Over all it was not great, but not terrible. Perhaps because it was good, I thought it had the potential to be better than it was. I would rate it 2.5 stars, but don't knoiw how to do a half star here, or if they are even available.
I am going to read the second one, and possibly the third. I usually give a series 3 books to let the author get the kinks out before giving up.