There were two reasons why William South did not want to be on the murder team. The first was that it was October. The migrating birds had begun arriving on the coast. The second was that, though nobody knew, he was a murderer himself.
This opening to THE BIRDWATCHER promises a story that will engage both emotions and mind, one that will question society’s values and regulations, one that will not be just a murder mystery, although it starts with a murder.
The murdered man, Bob Reyner, was William South’s neighbour and close friend, and his body was battered, suggesting that he was killed in a rage. South, who is assigned to assist DS Alexandra Cupidi in her investigation, soon discovers that he didn’t know Reyner as well as he thought, as he helps Cupidi, the newest member of the team, search for evidence. After they discover the body of a vagrant, Donald Fraser, an apparent suicide, along with some incriminating evidence, Cupidi concludes that Fraser was the murderer.
During the investigation, there are flashbacks wherein we learn that South grew up during the Troubles in Northern Ireland with a father who was highly respected member of a paramilitary group, but still abused both William and his mother. It is obvious early in the narrative that 14-year-old William murdered his violent father using his father’s gun, although much of this backstory is told slowly, showing why South was never suspected of the crime. Instead, another member of the paramilitary group, Donald Fraser, was convicted of his father’s murder.
So South knew both the murdered man and his alleged murderer; he worries because the accepted theory (that Fraser killed Reyner during a robbery gone bad) does not coincide with what he knew about Fraser’s personality, nor does it clarify the unexplained mysteries in Reyner’s life. Also, South feels that the disappearance of the local drug dealer, Judy, is somehow connected to the overall picture.
Concurrent with the murder investigation is yet another story strand. DS Cupidi has recently arrived in the isolated Kent community, and her teenage daughter, Zoe, is having difficulty fitting in. South tries to help Zoe by introducing her to his passion, birdwatching. Slowly these three threads merge—South’s past, Zoe’s problems, and the current murder investigation, leading to an explosive climax.
Altogether a very satisfying storyline—complex, a logical disclosing of clues, a strong emphasis on character and location, and an explosive turning point when all becomes clear. Plus excellent writing.