Strangers – Gripping New Thriller
Paul Finch is one of the best crime writers of the moment with his Detective Mark Heckenburg series which is one of the bestselling series in the country. He is now introducing us to PC Lucy Clayburn a ten-year veteran in the Greater Manchester Police working around the Crowley division. All she wants to be is a detective but she blotted her copybook when she was a member of CID for a week and her Inspector was shot.
Lucy Clayburn has worked the Crowley division and is even a training officer, but after ten years she tends to have a jaundiced eye, a coppers eye on things that happen. She knows her patch well, and certainly knows her regular ‘customers’ and not afraid to crack heads together when need be, even if it is just to save on the paperwork at the end of a shift.
At the end of one shift Detective Superintendent Priya Newal, as to have a chat with her, and wonders if she would like to work on a high profile murder case. She would not be on as a detective, but as a decoy, she would be working the streets to gain the trust of all the working girls and gather intelligence. The Police are sure that their killer is a woman who is picking up men and then murdering them, while also removing their crown jewels.
Clayburn has been given a patch on the East Lancs a busy A road that takes you from Manchester to Liverpool and she befriends a young prostitute, Tammy who seems to spend most of her time drunk. It is through Tammy that she starts to make connections and gains useable intelligence if not necessarily for the case she is on.
Clayburn does not realise how much she is putting herself in danger, maybe, because every day of her working life in uniform she is used to the dangers. She does not realise how much she is putting herself in to danger when she starts to mix with some very dangerous Manchester criminals and one seems to recognise her from somewhere.
As Lucy Clayburn works herself in to the ground, she is taken off the case, which still means the female killer is out there somewhere. Like any maverick with a hunch, Clayburn just has to have one last look at the case.
Paul Finch has once again written a winner of a thriller with plenty of twists and turns you really do not know where he is taking you. Finch had created a character in Lucy Clayburn you just want to will to succeed, but like any central character things are not as easy as they should be.
Finch’s prose at times brutal, but clear and paints picture of the north side of Manchester and the Crowley division, after the mining has gone, and industrialisation has moved somewhere else. This is a bleak hard division somewhere between Salford, Bolton and Wigan, where even the Rottweilers go around in pairs for their own safety.
This is a wonderfully dark crime thriller, that will really draw you in, Paul Finch is a master storyteller, who knows how to keep the reader on tenterhooks from beginning to end. Paul Finch has created a truly gripping, gruesome thriller, whose female serial killer is prolific and well hidden, but his heroine has her dark secrets and is not afraid to walk in the valley of death. A new hero from a great author.