COMMENTS
In the previous novel, Death of a Scriptwriter, a symbolic suicide took place, promising big changes to the future of this series, implicating the 'high-jacking' of an author's work by new forces in the word games, so to speak. M C Beaton's novels were getting 'adulterated', and she was outspoken about it.
In this novel, the transition from the traditional Lochdubh villagers to new characters are in the works, and the results is a lukewarm introduction to a 'more acceptable' new political agenda in the structure of the series.
Hamish Macbeth is still the anchor character and must bow down to a new superior. In this case Chief Inspector Olivia Chater. Together, acting as a married couple, they must solve a drug case and it gets messy when the jealous, mean-spirited Detective Chief Inspector Blair is using his underworld connections to thwart their efforts. In his frame of mind, it is essential to prevent Hamish Macbeth from becoming an international hero.
On the positive side, Hamish Macbeth is determined to remain in his beloved Lochdubh, and refuses to accept the death of the young Tommy Jarret, who rented a cottage from Parry McSporran where he was trying to stay clean and write his story. There's a green-eyed monster in the Drim loch, attracting tourists to the struggling village of Drim. Somewhere outside the community, a new religious cult is established, called the Church of the Rising Sun, which inspires Hamesh to take his two-week break and paint the church as a depressed outcast, sleeping in his old Volvo—the rusty, dusty old vehicle, rented from Sean Fitzpatrick, the recluse. His superiors are once again convinced that Hamish has lost a few marbles, but get their act together when his instincts convinces them of bigger, more sinister shenanigans in the communities.
Come to think of it, Hamish becomes a jobless / homeless outcast, as well as the James Bond of Scotland in one go. Imagine our beloved constable in an Armani suit, designer jeans, suede and leather jackets, silk underwear, shirts from the famous Jermyn Street shirt-maker, gold cuff links, gold Rolex, wraparound sunglasses, and a camelhair coat! My oh my! He finally travels outside his comfort zone to Amsterdam and, well, expands his horizons in more ways than one ...
Death of an Addict is an adventure to die for ... (in more ways than one) ... for both reader and protagonist. However, the villagers of Lochdubh is not to be underestimated ... :-)
214 pages.