Why is it that the books you love are amongst the hardest to review? Part of my problem here is that I really want to talk about how absolutely brilliant, if somewhat emotionally gruelling, this book is, but I also want to avoid spoilers. If you've read the book, you'll likely understand. If you haven't yet, then boy do you have a treat in store. Twenty two books in and Angela Marsons' Kim Stone series shows no signs of going stale. This book is as witty, gripping, anger inducing and a total an utter roller coaster of emotions as everyone of its predecessors. There is even a mention of a beloved character from 'the book that shall not be named', just to make sure it all hit home for me. Like that was even needed.
For once, and this is one of the real factors that makes this book stand out, Kim and co are pulled out of their comfort zone and sent, not entirely unwillingly, to the seaside to assist in an investigation. More specifically they are sent to Blackpool, a place of which Kim has very mixed memories, to help investigate the disappearance of two young boys. The local force are keen to separate the two investigations, certain that one of the boys simply ran away, and that only one, the one from the more affluent family, was likely to have come to harm. No guessing as to Kim's feelings on that particular assessment, and it's not long before the team are knee deep in the investigative mud, determined to prove that they Blackpool force have got things incredibly wrong. There is second reason for their secondment up north, one that only the Midlands team know about, and this, along with a real split in the personalities between the two teams, adds a simmering tension that makes inter-force cooperation an aspirational theory only.
This book takes us well beyond the bounds of a simple abduction or runaway story. Angela Marsons intersperses the investigation with some often harrowing scenes from the perspective of one of the missing boys. It means that we, the reader, understands the implications of what is happening a touch sooner than the teams do, but in a way that is brought into stark focus when a tragically similar situation drags Kim back home for a brief time. There is so much tension, and so much mystery and misdirection as the identities of the perpetrators remains hidden until right at a crucial moment, right after a crescendo of a showdown in which Kim, Bryant, Stacey and Penn show why they are one of the best crime fighting teams in fiction right now. Then again, contrasted against the local team, led by Red Butler and his assorted officers, its really not a fair comparison at all.
I love the humour that Angela Marsons injects into her books, and trust me when I say that it is needed in this particular case. There are elements of the story that will make the skin crawl and yet are scarily plausible with that 'ripped from the headlines' feel about them. Add in the tragedy of the boys' situation - again too possible to sit all that comfortably as simple fiction - and another element of Kim's investigation that takes a decidedly dark turn, and those small pockets of mirth are much needed.
They laughs come less from Bryant and Kim's own blend of banter this time, for reasons that are clear in the reading and in Bryant's assigned task from which he takes absolutely no pleasure. In fact, it comes from the most unlikely of sources, in the funniest of ways and, for once, Kim seems unnaturally reticent in setting the source of the humour straight. If you ever wondered quite how far Kim's nice gene can be pulled before it snaps, this book will leave you with a pretty good idea.
Little Children is another absolutely brilliant addition to the Kim Stone series, and shows that this particular author just goes from strength to strength. Gritty, witty, intense and emotional, it hits all the right notes. Most definitely recommended, and worthy of a red hot reads badge. Kim fans will love it.