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When you sell your soul, the devil gives no refunds...

When an old man is burned alive in a sleepy ex-mining village, Detective Chief Inspector Ryan is called in to investigate. He soon discovers that, beneath the facade of a close-knit community, the burn from decades-old betrayal still smoulders. When everyone had a motive, can he unravel the secrets of the past before the killer strikes again?


Meanwhile, back at Northumbria CID, trouble is brewing with rumours of a mole in Ryan’s department. With everyone under suspicion, can he count on anybody but himself?


Murder and mystery are peppered with romance and humour in this fast-paced crime whodunnit set amidst the spectacular Northumbrian landscape.

283 pages, Kindle Edition

First published July 27, 2019

4013 people are currently reading
1394 people want to read

About the author

L.J. Ross

58 books3,230 followers
LJ Ross is an internationally bestselling author, whose books have sold over 7 million copies worldwide.

Her debut, Holy Island, was released in 2015 and became an instant, international bestseller. Since then, a further eighteen of her novels have gone on to take the coveted #1 spot, some even before general release and whilst only available to ‘pre-order’. The Bookseller magazine has reported on Louise having topped the ‘Most Read’ and ‘Most Sold’ fiction charts, and she has garnered an army of loyal fans who love her atmospheric and addictive storytelling.

Her eleventh novel, The Infirmary, is a prequel story to the DCI Ryan series and is available as a major Audible Originals audio-drama starring Tom Bateman, Kevin Whately, Bertie Carvel, Hermione Norris and Alun Armstrong.

The first novel in her Alexander Gregory Thrillers series, Impostor, was shortlisted in the British Book Awards 2020: Crime & Thriller Book of the Year. The audiobook of Impostor, narrated by Hugh Dancy, was also selected as a finalist in the New York Festivals Radio Awards, Best Fiction Audiobook of the Year Category.

In May 2021, Louise was shortlisted for the prestigious Crime Writers’ Association ‘Dagger in the Library’ award, which recognises an author’s entire body of work having been consistently enjoyed by library borrowers around the United Kingdom, and an author’s longstanding support of libraries.

Louise was born in Northumberland, England. She studied undergraduate and postgraduate Law at King’s College, University of London and then abroad in Paris and Florence. She spent much of her working life in London, where she was a lawyer for a number of years until taking the decision to change career and pursue her dream to write. Now, she writes full time and lives with her husband and son in Northumberland and Edinburgh. She enjoys reading all manner of books, painting, travelling and spending time with family and friends.

To find out more about the many philanthropic ventures Louise has founded and sponsored through her publishing imprint, Dark Skies Publishing, please visit ‘Philanthropy’.

If you would like to connect with LJ Ross, she would be very happy to hear from you:

https://www.facebook.com/LJRossAuthor
https://twitter.com/ljross_author
www.lovesuspense.com
lj_ross@outlook.com

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 499 reviews
Profile Image for Nora|KnyguDama.
551 reviews2,423 followers
June 23, 2023
Kaip faina - skaitydama šią knyga pajaučiau, kad pagaliau prisirišu prie veikėjų, man jie rūpi ir įsijaučiu taip, lyg apie savus skaityčiau. Nors detektyvo Rajeno seriją skaitau ne iš eilės, bet dabar jau norisi čiupt tą neskaitytą pradžią ir pasivyt iki naujausios knygos. O šioji - jau trylikta!

Šį kartą Rajeno komanda tiria keistą seno angliakasių miestelio bylą. Gaisro metu žūva senolis, kurio prieš daug metų nekentė kone visi gyventojai. Vėliau išaiškėja, jog ir iki gaisro vyras buvo negyvas, tad tiriama žmogžudystė. Lenda senos ir užmirštos nuoskaudos, istorijoje pranykusios nuodėmės, kurios ir po tiek metų kažkam nedavė ramybės. Šalia viso to - Rajeno komandoje atsirado išdavikas, policijos planus pranešinėjantis nusikaltėliams.

Labai faina, kad Ross nusprendė skaitytojams padovanoti naują vaiką - veikėją, atsiradusį dvyliktoje knygoje. Ją skaitydama vis vyliausi, kad mažoji Semė dar sušmėžuos sekančiose serijos dalyje ir VALIO! Ji čia ir puikiai papildo puslapius! Kaip ir visada - Rajeno knygos greitos, nesudėtingos, tačiau įtraukiančios ir su cinkeliu. Daug čia asmeninių tyrėjų gyvenimų, daug policijos darbo užkulisių, bet kai jau susibendrauji su tyrėjų komanda - tai tik dar praturtina knygą ir savotiškai prijaukina skaitytoją. Patiko!
Profile Image for Sarah.
2,951 reviews222 followers
July 29, 2019
Penshaw is the 13th book in the DCI Ryan Mystery series. To get full enjoyment from this book I would recommend that you read The Moor which is the book prior to this one, as there are a lot of references to events that happened in the previous novel.

It’s quite hard to know what to say in my review for this book as I don’t want to give to much away in the previous book as well as this one. It was great to see one particular character in this book who I loved from the previous one as I was very invested in their story and whilst they don’t appear much in it, it was still great to catch up with them as it were.

The story line set in the ex mining village and with glimpses of what life was like during the strike really made an impression on me. Whilst I was still a child myself when it happened, I can still remember watching the news of the strikes and also the impact it had on people. My dad worked in the mining industry and whilst not a miner himself, very much affected him and the company he worked for.

There are a few threads in the story, the main ones being to do with the murders that are occurring as well as the story line to do with Jack, a detective on the force. By heck it makes for some compelling reading and I was glued to the pages.

Penshaw has it all. It is jammed full of murder, mystery and mayhem that punches you in the gut yet pulls on your emotional heart strings. I couldn’t absorb the words in front of me fast enough as the pace picks up and everything comes to a climax and what a climax it was. LJ Ross has delivered another spell binding read that delivers on all counts.
Profile Image for Clemens Schoonderwoert.
1,361 reviews130 followers
July 13, 2025
**Read 4.5 STARS!**

This eventful crime mystery is the 13th volume of the "DCI Ryan" series.

At the beginning of the book you'll find a short phrase made by Winston Churchill.

The author's storytelling is great, all characters come vividly to life in this tale about betrayal, emotional blackmail and murder, while also the Northumbrian countryside is superbly pictured.

The book starts off with a prologue set in 1984, during the mining strikes against Margaret Thatcher and her Government, and the event within the prologue will be the start of Alan Watson's personal betrayal by someone very close to him.

The main story starts with the death of the Alan Watson at home, while his wife Joan is seriously injured, while other serious crimes and persons will also need to be investigated by DCI Ryan and his team of DI MacKenzie, DS Phillips, DC Lowerson and Trainee DC Yates, including the mole within Ryan's department, and all these separate cases will connect somehow with each other and in the end it will come down to the same devious crime lord, and doing his dirty work are his minions of criminals headed by a ruthless killer and several dirty bend coppers are included.

What is to follow is an intriguing and gripping police procedure, where corruption and devious criminals will get counterattacked in a mission set up by DC Lowerson, DCI Ryan and DCI Blackett by using a clever tactic in an attempt to draw the enemy into their web and be able to catch and apprehend these criminals and dirty cops to make this secret operation a complete success in the end.

Highly recommended, for this is an excellent addition to this wonderful series, and that's why i like to call this episode: "A Captivating Policing Counterstrike"!

Profile Image for Mei.
1,897 reviews471 followers
July 5, 2021
Oh, Jack you never learn!!!
At least, this time, you had the intelligence not to try to solve everything by yourself!!!
An intricate crime/mystery with a sad ending that leaves you with a bad taste in your mouth!
Profile Image for Justina Neliubšienė.
399 reviews61 followers
August 15, 2023
Šiame greito ir įtempto siužeto kriminaliniame detektyve paslaptingas žmogžudystes, nusikaltimus labai smagiai papildo romantiniai intarpai, humoras ir nuostabus Nortumbrijos kraštovaizdis.
Patinka man ši serija, vis su nekantrumu laukiu naujos dalies. 😉
Profile Image for Pat.
2,310 reviews501 followers
March 11, 2020
An old man, a former miner, is burned to death in his house, his wife barely escaping with her life. At first the death seems accidental, but is it? A few days later the man’s son, Simon, a former heroin addict dies from an apparent overdose, but was it? Ryan and his team smell a rat and start to investigate what possible motive there could be for these two deaths within one family so close together.

The answers take them back 30 years, to the time of the miner’s strike and the allegations that someone was feeding information about picket lines to the police who then came out mob-handed. The outcome is shocking for the close-knit local community and a senseless waste of life brought about through greed and power struggles.
Profile Image for Nei_dienos_be_knygos.
313 reviews54 followers
October 2, 2023
#perskaičiau
L.J.Ross "Penšou"

Uch kokia serijos knyga 😍
L.J.Ross tikrai tapo viena mėgstamiausių detektyvų autore, ir ši knyga tik dar kartą patvirtino įsitikinimą, kad į greito siužeto, visai neištemptą knygą, galima sudėti begales dalykų, kurie išties prikausto dėmesį.
Labai patiko pinklės į kurias buvo įpainiotas vienas iš komandos narių 👌 Kaip visada įdomūs išbandymai tiek komandai, tiek Rajeno vidiniams moralės įsitikinimams 👏
Žinoma, kaip ir kitose serijos knygose, taip ir šioje - netrūko nei humoro, nei romantikos ❤️
Net nėra ką daugiau pridurti, lengvas, malonus, intriguojantis ir žavintis detektyvas 👏
⭐⭐⭐⭐/5
Profile Image for mnemosineirknygos.
453 reviews1 follower
March 20, 2025
13 inspektoriaus Rajeno detektyvas.

"Nėra tokio dalyko kaip tobulas nusikaltimas, ir šį kartą žudikas porą kartų slystelėjo."

Negaliu patikėti, kad jau 13 serijos dalis. Inspektorius Rajenas ir jo komanda man pato tokiais artimais, ko net nebūčiau pagalvojus serijos pradžioje. Jei kam nors kas nutiktų, būtų labai skaudu.. Jų visų tarpusiavo ryšys labai stiprus, jie net ne komanda, jie šeima. Rajenas su Ana, Filipsas su Denise, o kur dar naujoji pagrandukė Samanta, kuri į jų gyvenime įnešė daug chaoso, bet nepaprasto džiaugsmo. Ir kaip istorija be nekaltų juokelių.. Net iš Samantos 🤭 kelis kartus net prunkštelėjau 😁 labai patiko. Meilė ir humoras neatsiejama šios serijos dalis.

"— Tu pats visada man sakai, kad amžius — ne kliūtis būti nusikaltėliu, — dalykiškai pastebėjo jis."

Kalbant apie pačią istoriją, kaip visada nepaprasto grožio vietos ir kraštovaizdis. Greito siužeto, bet ne su vienu nusikaltimu, o net keliais vienu metu. Kai Rajenas bando išsiaiškinti nuo ko gaisre žuvo senolis, kitas komandos narys pakliūva į pinkles ir gyvenimas tampa labai sudėtingas. Kai nebežinai ką pasirinkti, išnešti sveiką kailį ar geriau prisipažinti ir išspręsti viską legaliais būdais. Suintrigavai? Ups, netyčia 🤭

"Bet jis labai anksti suprato, kad nors smurtas — efektyvi priemonė, emocinė prievarta dar efektyvesnė."

🍃5.0🍃
Profile Image for Ugnė | pilna_lentyna.
369 reviews169 followers
September 12, 2025
13-oji detektyvo Rajeno serijos dalis

Vieną naktį buvusių kalnakasių kaimelį sudrebina tragedija - gaisro metu, savo namuose, žūva senolis. Iš pirmo žvilgsnio atrodytų, jog tai nelaimingas atsitikimas, bet Rajenas netrunka pastebėti, kad jo mirtis susijusi su daug tamsesniais dalykais. Už draugiškos bendruomenės fasado vis dar rusena senos išdavystės, o kiekvienas kaimelio gyventojas, regis, turi savų priežasčių slėpti tiesą.

Tuo pat metu paties Rajeno komandoje sklando gandai, kad vienas iš tyrėjų galėjo būti užverbuotas nusikaltėlių grupuotės. Kas išdrįso išduoti kolegas? Ir ar galima dar kuo nors pasikliauti?

Nors knygos pradžia buvo gana lėta ir iš praeitos dalies palikta intriga nusuko ne tuo, keliu, kuriuo tikėjausi, kad pasuks, man vistiek patiko. Autorė pagaliau leido Rajenui trumpam išlipti iš teisinguolio vaidmens. Ir galiu pripažinti, kad toks, jis man dar labiau patinka 😀

Rajeno komanda čia, kaip visada, buvo svarbiausia. Pastebėjau, kad jų tarpusavio santykiai man jau ima tapti svarbesni už pačius nusikaltimus - tikrai prisirišau prie šito "serialo" 😍 Gerai, kad lentynoj dar laukia kelios "serijos" 😄
Profile Image for Kerry.
663 reviews41 followers
August 19, 2019
Penshaw is book thirteen in the DCI Ryan Mysteries series and it’s every bit as entertaining as all the previous books, which I have read and LOVED! I feel like I am becoming very repetitive in my reviews of this series, but honestly, I can’t recommend them highly enough. Each book is unique, but similar at the same time, if that makes sense!? The main characters are very familiar to me now and I talk about them as if I know them in real life! (I think my husband thinks I’ve lost the plot! Lol!) However, each new book brings a fresh challenge to Ryan and the team.
This book finds DCI Ryan and his team investigating the seemingly accidental death of an elderly man, in his own living room. His wife was unable to get him out of their house in time when it went up in flames. Something doesn’t sit right with Ryan though and it’s soon obvious that there is far more to this family’s story. I really enjoyed the ex-mining community aspect of this book. My father-in-law and my brother-in-law were miners back in the day and whenever I’ve heard them talk about their time down the pit it’s always been obvious that they were all more than just colleagues to each other, they were family and it was less of a job and more of a way of life. I can only imagine how difficult life must have been for these families when the pits were closed, and their lives were completely turned upside down! The end of an era and not something everyone found easy to move on from.
This book also see’s Lowerson getting himself involved in a sticky situation (putting it very mildly!) again. Just as he seemed to be getting his life back on track.
Ryan is tasked with helping to uncover a mole within the department. A task which doesn’t really sit well with him, but he is confident it isn’t anyone within his own team and that he will soon get to the bottom of it all.
As always nothing is ever straight forward, and I was treated once again to a fast-paced crime thriller which kept me glued to my kindle as often as I could possibly manage around real life!
I love that some of the characters are all loved up and that there is a little bit of romance and happiness amongst all the murder.
I love how Samantha has impacted on Phillips and MacKenzie and I look forward to how their relationships develop.
I have my fingers crossed for Lowerson and Yates!
I can’t wait for book 14!

https://chataboutbooks.blog/2019/08/1...
209 reviews3 followers
July 31, 2019
Could we kill Jack off?

I have loved this series but 20% in this book I tossed it in. Jack is a tedious character and again he has landed in bother again. I just don’t care if he lives, dies, develops some level of EQ. I’m just bored with his endless stupidity.
This story has such potential, repercussions from the 1984 miners strike. Major investigation in to organized crime. However I couldn’t go on. I pray that Jack dies in this book but I suspect LJ Ross loves this silly boy as a protagonist. So it’s farewell Ryan, Phillips, MacKenzie, Melanie ( trust me Mel you can do better than lust after Jack) you have been good friends.
I’m leaving this series behind..mic drop!
Profile Image for Cathy Ryan.
1,267 reviews76 followers
October 1, 2019
Opening with a prologue set during the Miner’s strike in 1984, the location is the village of Penshaw, in County Durham. A terrible time for the country which resulted in the closure of mines and collieries, deaths, imprisonment and long held grievances. The emotions, volatility of the situation, rising tide of feelings and knock on effect is captured perfectly. Thirty five years later Alan Watson, whose life went on a downward spiral after the mine closed, is killed in a house fire, his wife badly injured.

Following straight on from the previous book, with only a couple of days between the two, Jack Lowerson once again finds himself in a dangerous situation he can’t control, with the preceding events gradually unfolding and the consequences of his actions affecting the team, particularly Ryan.

Frank Phillips and Denise MacKenzie are adjusting to life as adoptive parents. Their interactions, and Sam’s experiences in school, and the unique way she deals with bullies, add humour and light-heartedness to an otherwise darker story.

Ryan has been tasked to lead Operation Watchman, a new initiative targeting organised crime in the region, as well as investigating the fire at Alan Watson’s house with Phillips. To make matters worse, it seems someone is leaking information to the people they’re investigating, and he’s unable to discuss it with anyone, not even Phillips. Ryan is under pressure to expose the corruption before any more damage is done.

I’m really enjoying following this series, and the development of the characters. LJ Ross has made them multi dimensional, believable and engaging, with distinct personalities and home lives that the reader can relate to. The stories are always set in an atmospheric (and real) location. The banter and strong sense of comradeship is very much in evidence again, which also adds to the realism.

The plot flows well and is anything but straightforward. The two threads—the death of the former miner and the corruption investigation—twist and turn before merging together with some surprises. And, as always, the writing, dialogue and police procedural is convincing and compelling.
Profile Image for Skyesmum .
507 reviews14 followers
November 27, 2020
I really enjoyed listening to this. I live not far from the villages mentioned and I couldn't help but make mental notes of some of the places to visit.
I thought that the story was well thought out and you can't help but like Ryan, his team and his wife Annie.
I have just waded in with the series and need to listen to them as and when they are available from the library, which will be interesting.

All in all, a good solid police drama.
Profile Image for Barbara Rogers.
1,754 reviews207 followers
November 3, 2020
Series: DCI Ryan Mysteries #12
Publication Date: 7/27/19
Number of Pages: 280

OMGoodness! There is a LOT going on in Northumberia and we all need our running shoes on to keep up with it. Ryan and Lowerson are placed in untenable and dangerous positions, dead bodies are turning up in Penshaw, a dangerous villain from previous books turns up, and it appears there is more corruption within the constabulary. OH! MY! As always, the fast-paced, can’t-put-it-down mystery is filled with twists-and-turns that will keep your head spinning.

There has been a marked increase in crime and at the same time, a decrease in successful apprehensions and prosecutions. Because of his sterling reputation, DCI Ryan has been tasked with heading up a task force consisting of all of the various units such as drugs, fraud, major crimes, digital forensics, organized crime, etc. His task is to foster information sharing across agencies so that they can all help each other catch, prosecute, and imprison the culprits responsible for the mayhem. At the same time, Ryan is approached by his boss, Chief Constable Sandra Morrison, and DCI Andrew Blackett, of what is known as the Ghost Squad. They are sure that the policing forces have been compromised – at all levels – and that there is even a mole in Ryan’s own team. OH! MY! Ryan’s task is to figure out who, throughout the policing forces, have been compromised. Ryan is sure nobody in his squad would be compromised – one of them cannot be a mole on this very task force. Or, can they?

While all of that is happening, we are learning about the sad death of Alan Watson in Penshaw. Alan had been a robust, active, dedicated miner for years – until the great strike in the fall of 1984. Alan had been a major organizer and leader of the union and the strike, but when it failed, a rumor started, and it accused him of providing information to the government about the union's plans. It broke him for his close-knit community to think that of him and he took to drink. Now, over 30 years later, his charred remains have been pulled from their burning home by his wife. She’s seriously burned, but Alan didn’t survive. Was he murdered or did he die of a heart attack and drop his cigarette, thus causing the fire? MacKenzie and Lowerson catch the Watson case and something about it just seems ‘off’ to MacKenzie. As they investigate, and more deaths and betrayals occur, they figure out that there is something much bigger going on.

You’ll love the mystery and you’ll see Ryan’s angst and dismay at dealing with yet more corruption within the constabulary. He thought they’d taken care of all of that two years ago and yet it is back again. It was good to see, and hope, that Lowerson is finally finding himself and realizing what is really important in life. I also liked seeing the growth in Trainee Detective Constable Melanie Yates and look forward to seeing more of her in future books.

Great read. I hope you enjoy it as much as I did.

Profile Image for Jean.
45 reviews19 followers
December 29, 2019
I pass this monument regularly on my way to my sister's, it is so good to read books that set locally :-)
Profile Image for Boosmummy.
380 reviews5 followers
January 17, 2020
Another great read by LJ Ross. I love these books not only for the story but they're set in my second favourite county, Northumberland, my home county of Yorkshire obviously my favourite!

I love how the main characters grow through each book and become people you would invite round for a drink. The storyline flows and the plots are always realistic enough to believe they could happen in your area. Each book could be read as a standalone but I prefer to read them in order. Definitely one of my favourite crime authors.
Profile Image for Sherrie.
654 reviews24 followers
August 11, 2019
Another excellent book featuring Northumberland and DI Ryan. Looking forward to the next one
58 reviews
December 20, 2024
Love love loved this book! Had me hooked from the very start. I don’t know if it’s because it’s set in Penshaw which is very close to home or because of LJ Ross’s fantastic storytelling!
57 reviews
April 22, 2025
I really enjoy every book in this series, and this one was even slightly above average for me.
Profile Image for Lynne.
4 reviews25 followers
November 1, 2022
I’m loving this series except for Jack. The progression of the other characters is realistic and enjoyable but Jack just seems all over the place, especially in this outing. Otherwise would be a five star review.
Profile Image for Thebooktrail.
1,879 reviews340 followers
August 12, 2019
Penshaw

Visit the locations in the novel

Penshaw. When I knew the latest novel was set on this very iconic site, I was intrigued. This to any North East native, and indeed many visitors, is a legendary tale of folklore and magic. A giant worm once wrapped itself around the hill on which the monument is built, giving it its unique shape. This is a place where fighting dragons and getting justice for local people is well ingrained into the history and heritage.

Apt then that the major theme of the book is the Thatcher years, the closure of the mines and the collieries which left many scars on the North East landscape and collective memory. The novel’s core story is built on the experiences and glimpses of life in these pit villages. An area once proud and hard-working saw their men belittled and left with a sense of worthlessness. Communities foundered and life was hard for many for a very long time.

BookTrail Travel to the locations in Penshaw
The main story however emerges strong from this solid basis of heritage and heartache. There is a murder and an investigation to get their teeth into (one involving a former miner, the other corrupt officers) which get the team working hard. Then there’s Jack – a character who has been through it and who we get to learn more about in this installment.

There’s lots to love here, but the best bit is that the easy style and easy flow of writing is what sucks you into the story. You read hungrily and quickly and only realise the complex historical background at the end. There’s solid research here that you access via L J Ross’ easy accessible style., Snippets of local history and intrigue pepper the juicy plot , only enhancing the flavour of the main meal and never overdoing it.

The characters are further developed too and there are some surprises in store. Some authors with such a meaty plot and background might neglect the characters but L J Ross puts them in the driving seat. Keep an eye on Mackenzie, Phillips and Samantha.

This really is a brilliantly woven series of crime, intrigue, romance and spectacular sense of place.

Recommended!
Profile Image for Julie Lacey.
2,025 reviews131 followers
September 27, 2021
Another great read from L.J. Ross.
I’d recommend reading the previous books in the series to get the most from this book, or at the very least, the previous book - The Moor.
Lots happens in The Moor and has repercussions in this book for Jack.
The book gets off to a flying start and doesn’t let go until the gripping conclusion.
There’s a few murders for the team to get stuck into but Ryan is also tasked with finding some corrupt officers.
Another great read in this brilliant series.
Profile Image for Dee Groocock.
1,405 reviews59 followers
August 2, 2019
A great start to this latest in the series where we go back to the 80’s and the mining strikes. Living in an old mining community, I found this really interesting.
When a fire starts in the home of an 80 year old man and results in his death, DCI Ryan has to wonder if this is related to the mining strike back in the 1980’s. DCI Ryan and his team have a lot to contend with, as well as this case, it is believed there is a mole in the team. Who can Ryan trust? Are all his team whiter than white?
I couldn’t put this book down, I was hooked from the first page. A fast paced story that was action packed. Full of great detail and plenty of North East charm. I highly recommend this book.
Profile Image for David Lowther.
Author 12 books29 followers
August 20, 2019
I ordered Penshaw because I'm very familiar with the area. I didn't realise there were a dozen books featuring DCI Ryan which precede this.

Penshaw is an excellent detective story with some very attractive heroes, some dreadful villains, thrilling locations and fascinating plot. The police procedural aspect of the tale is well-constructed and grippingly told. Dialogue is convincing and the plot exciting. Soon I shall start at the beginning with the DCI Ryan mysteries. Very entertaining.

David Lowther. Author of The Blue Pencil, Liberating Belsen, Two Families at War and The Summer of '39, all published by Sacristy Press.
Profile Image for Elisa.
4,271 reviews44 followers
August 1, 2019
I love this series, but I usually appreciate the whodunit part of these procedurals. This volume is more centered on drug kingpins and corruption, which is something that usually bores me. I say usually because I was invested here so I enjoyed the plot. The key is how much I love the characters, so they could be investigating how long it takes paint to dry and I'd still like the novel.
Profile Image for Jen.
1,695 reviews62 followers
July 28, 2019
With a fantastic cast of characters, a beautiful setting and an undeniable sense of place, it is little wonder that time and time again these books, the DCI Ryan series from LJ Ross, head straight to the top of the charts within mere hours of their release. I was late to the series, but have made up for it since, and each time a new book is released I will ensure that I make time to read it, no matter what. LJ Ross has reintroduced me to a part of the country that I always felt was beautiful, and has made me appreciate all of the wonders it has to hold all over again. Hell, I've taken my summer holiday there the last two years on the bounce and will be checking to see if third time really is a charm in 2020. So many things left to see and places yet to explore that I think I could visit every year for a decade and still not complete it all.

This time around the area that Ms Ross draws our attention to is Penshaw, a small village that sits to the west of the Penshaw Monument, around halfway between Washington and Houghton le Spring. Now I have been to Washington more often than I care to remember and whilst I recall having seen it many, many times, I have never really given it much thought. I have now.

The story opens in the midst of the Miners strike in the mid 1980's, a particularly dark time for the country, especially the heavily affected communities in the North East. Whilst the colliery in this book is fictional, the hate, the fighting and the emotional toil which is depicted in the story is not. This is only a back drop to what is yet to come, but has a heavy impact nonetheless. Whilst I don't really remember much of that period in history - I was only 9 when the strikes ended, on the verge of becoming an Aunty which was much more exciting to a young girl - many will have lived, and still do live, with the devastation that the pit closures caused.

None more so, it turns out, than the book's first victim, Alan Watson, long thought to be the man who turned 'worm' betraying his village and his friends in the worst possible way. When Alan, and his wife Joan, are caught up in a house fire, DCI Ryan and Frank Phillips are sent to investigate, to determine if the fire was simply an accident or something far more sinister. With Alan having spent his life in hiding, slowing declining with each passing day, could his need to know the truth have been his last mistake, or did his fall from grace and sinking deeper into the bottle prove fatal?

This is a perplexing case for Ryan co, nothing quite as it seems. The Watson family are completely fractured and the author has captured perfectly the differing fortunes of the parents and their children, even the two children themselves, one who turned to drugs, the other to politics. Add into the mix a whole mass of corruption, drug wars, and organised crime, as Ryan also has to head a multi task force operation to bring down a new up and coming crime syndicate, and you are left with a story which is equal parts tension, action and intrigue, one which kept me hooked from beginning to end.

Speaking of ends ... Anyone who has read The Moor, book twelve in the series, will remember what a twist the author threw at readers right at the end there. Well ... no real spoilers to say that Samantha is back, and as bubbly and bright as ever. Her arrival in Phillips and MacKenzie's life has thrown them for a loop, leading to certain changes being needed, but it does give a real ray of light to the story and I'm loving seeing her stick about. And as for her unique way of handling the school bullies - love it. And then there is Jack. Jack, Jack Jack! His actions last time around will have repercussions for the whole team, leading to Ryan making some choices that go against everything he stands for, asking others to do things for him that he would never normally ask. You can feel the anguish over those choices, but, as is Ryan, as a reader you are thankful he has Anna to go home to.

I love the way the author has built up this series, creating characters who are believable, relatable, determined but most of all fun. I love Phillips' humour, Ryan's stoicism and high sense of morality, also the way in which being with his friends and family, especially Anna, humanises him. Even if they are annoyingly perfect ;). A series which keeps going from strength to strength and I loved it.
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508 reviews23 followers
August 1, 2019
Penshaw is the thirteenth book in the fabulous DCI Ryan series, set in the beautiful North East of England, which I’m proud to call my home. This book follows straight on from the cliffhanger ending of The Moor, where Philip’s and MacKenzie were about make a life altering decision, and DCI Jack Lowerson finds himself in a dangerous situation. After a fire at a house in Penshaw, Ryan and Philips are called in to see if there are any suspicious circumstances surrounding the death. Ryan also finds himself heading Operation Watchman, a cross department initiative aimed at bringing down Bobby Singh and his drugs business. With two investigations and the suspicions of a mole in the team, DCI Ryan finds himself pulled in several directions and not able to confide in anyone, not even Philip’s.

Since finishing The Moor with it’s shocking cliffhanger, I have been chomping at the bit to get my hands on Penshaw. Only two days have passed time wise between the ending of one book to the beginning of the next, but a lot seems to have happened. DCI Jack Lowerson found himself in a life threatening predicament at the end of The Moor, and in this book we see him back at work but battered, bruised and frightened. Slowly we are fed the details of what happened over those two days and why he is acting out of character. The other plot line of the body of eighty year old Alan Watson dying the house fire has links back to the Miner’s strikes of 1984 that had a devastating effect in the North East, where mining was a primary industry. L.J Ross perfectly captures the feeling and consequences of the strikes, both at the time and how it still resonates today.

The good thing about a series is being able to return to characters that are now like friends, and seeing them grow over the course of the books. Ryan and Philips are like an old married couple and I don’t think I will ever tire of their dry, Geordie humour and sarcasm. Both find themselves facing new challenges, Ryan in his lead role on Operation Watchman, and Philips in his personal life with his wonderful wife DI Denise MacKenzie. There is also the on off romance of trainee DC Melanie Yates and DC Jack Lowerson. These all add light. and shade, drama with a touch of humour that make these books such a brilliant read.

For DCI Ryan fans Penshaw is a must read. Another fabulous crime thriller with plenty of drama and suspense, a touch of romance and the brilliant Geordie humour. The only downside is now having to wait for the next book in the series.
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