The main character in this gritty thriller is Detective Constable Max Wolfe, who lives alone with young daughter, Scout and their dog Stan, in London. We are shown from the very start of this novel that Wolfe is a man who flagrantly breaks the rules – sometimes, of course, that can be a good thing, but had one of his hunches in this book gone wrong his career might have ended rather swiftly. Quite often his behaviour seems rather too impulsive and you understand why his superior, Elizabeth Swire, becomes infuriated with him. However, a rather important act where he breaks several rules at once, at the beginning of the book, means that he is promoted to homicide. This is important for Wolfe, who has longed to work with Detective Chief Inspector Victor Malloy; someone he has immense respect for and looks to as something of a mentor.
Wolfe’s first case in homicide is when he and Molloy are called to investigate the death of a banker, whose throat has been violently slashed. An obvious suspect is his wife who, having caught him being unfaithful, had posted their marital bed to his office (meaning I liked her before I had even met her). However, shortly afterwards, there is another death – this time of a homeless man. At first, it seems that there can be no discernable link between the City banker and a down and out drug user, but it turns out that the two men both went to the same school – the exclusive, and expensive, Potter’s Field. Wolfe finds a photograph of a group of schoolboys who have something in common; they are being murdered. .. The answers to these crimes lay in the past and a crime which took place many years before. Worse, someone on the internet is claiming to be the killer and people are applauding the deaths of these ex-public schoolboys , while their friends are now fearful of being the next victim.
This is a fast paced and exciting book, with a good cast of characters. I did, however, find the over emphasis on Wolfe’s love of dogs rather wearing. Almost everyone in the book has a dog, loves dogs, and they are linked to Potter’s Field as well. I felt like saying, “we get the dogs, please shut up about them now!” At times I felt as though I was in some awful ‘cozy’ gone wrong, where a dog would end up solving the case. Secondly, I was not thrilled with the way female characters were represented in the storyline. Wolfe’s boss, Swire, is described as a kind of Thatcherite warrior, while other women are either headstrong, but need rescuing, are having affairs, are bad mothers or show various other disagreeable character traits. When Wolfe was actually out solving the case, the whole book came to life. The class of schoolboys, now successful lawyers, army officers and MP’s, are wonderfully realised and it is obvious that they are not telling the police all that they know. This is the first in a series and it was well plotted, but hopefully, by book two, the author will concentrate slightly more on the mystery (which was really good) and less on the detective’s problems at home.
Lastly, I received a copy of this book from the publishers, via NetGalley, for review.