If there are any crime thriller fans out there who have not yet been introduced to Steven Dunne's 'Reaper' series featuring the brooding maverick DI Damen Brooks, then you are in for a real treat. In fact, I'm a tiny bit envious of anyone who still has all four of these incredible books to read.
The Unquiet Grave finds DI Brooks back at the station after his recent suspension and injury. Brook has few friends and many enemies, and finds himself relegated to the cold case department. In his morgue-like office, surrounded by yellowing files containing cases that many other Detectives have tried and failed to solve, Brook considers his own future at regular intervals. His relationship with his daughter is strained, he's living on rice and cream cheese and has given up smoking. Only his old partner, DS John Noble, still believes in him and the local newspaper reporter is determined to blacken his name even more.
Brook's only colleague in the cold case department is Copeland; an ex-cop who devoted his life and his career to trying to catch his sister Tilly's murderer. Copeland's life has been ruined by that one event so many years ago, and Tilly's case has been reviewed time and time again.
Brook begins to see a pattern in a series of murders that began back in 1963 and the deeper he digs, the more he discovers. Wondering why these cases have remained unsolved for so long, Brook soon realises that he is uncovering not just the identity of the murderer, but also a web of lies and deceit from both inside and outside of the force.
Just like Steven Dunne's first three books; The Reaper, The Disciple and Deity, The Unquiet Grave kept me reading until the early hours. This really is high-end crime writing, excellently constructed and throwing enough red herrings around to both challenge and thrill the reader. DI Brook is a multi-layered character, and whilst there are a stock of flawed detective characters floating around the crime genre at the moment, Brook stands out from the rest with his intelligence, his emotional baggage and his determination to get to the bottom of a case, no matter what it takes.
The Unquiet Grave grips the reader from the first paragraph and doesn't let go until the very last word. The pace is perfect and the twists are genius.