This is the latest prequel in the DI Frost series that is being continued now by James Henry. It is August 1983, Jack Frost is homeless after the death of his wife results in the upcoming sale of the matrimonial home. He has been thrown out by DC Sue Clarke and scrambling around to find somewhere else he can lay his head. A wedding rehearsal for DS Waters and Kim Myles with Frost as best man is delayed when a body of a young woman is found posed on a grave at the church by the lay verger, Ben Weaver. It turns out to be the notorious Rachel Curtis, a woman involved in a previous high profile Denton police case. Jack and DS Waters investigate her murder with the eye of the media firmly following developments.
Another investigation is opened when a young boy, Richard Hammond, reports his mother, Jane, a local prostitute, missing. Frost has a bad feeling about this, is convinced she is dead, and organises a search for the body which turns up eventually. The ineffectual Superintendent Mullett is desperate to be elected the Golf Club Chairman. Hudson, the banker, is making his vote for him contingent on Harry Baskin firing a pole dancer, Karen Thomas, from the Coconut Grove Club. An under pressure Mullett tasks Frost with the job. Mullett and Frost are locked in battles that Frost invariably wins in the end. This means that DC Sue Clarke returns to work after maternity leave. New resident, Dominic Holland, reports that cash left in a cement mixer for a local builder has been stolen, after a party where the police were called. Denton's traffic problems rocket when 200 gallons of yellow paint is stolen from the council. Frost and his team are pushed to the limit to solve their cases in attempts to ensure that DS Waters nuptials go to plan.
This Frost prequel successfully capture the Frost and Denton of 1983, with the period details, culture and the prevalent attitudes and prejudices of the time such as the casual sexism and racism. Frost is in fine fettle, utterly dishevelled, hygienically challenged, yet somehow successful with women. He doesn't have a clue about computers, but he cares about the people on his team. His dogged determination to investigate despite obstacles and life getting in his way endears him to the reader. A great addition to the Frost series. Thanks to Random House Transworld for an ARC.