PROTAGONIST: John Cardinal, homicide detective
SETTING: Algonquin Bay
SERIES: #4 of 4
RATING: 3.75
Live has never been easy for Catherine Cardinal. A brilliant and passionate photographer, she has spent decades dealing with bipolar disorder. Several times, she has been hospitalized as she entered a manic phase of her disease. Throughout all of her illnesses, her husband, police detective John Cardinal, has stood stalwartly by her side. Truly, he is a living embodiment of the marriage vow, to stay together in sickness and in health. The truth of the matter is that he loves his wife unreservedly; they are partners through thick and thin.
And then the unthinkable happens. While out on a photo shoot, Catherine commits suicide. Cardinal can barely function through his grief. However, he is certain of one thing—no matter how dire things became for Catherine, she would never have hurt him in this way. She was a woman of courage and loyalty, and John feels she would never have given in to her disease, particularly since she was excited about her new photo project. But how do you explain the suicide note in her handwriting? Certainly, his fellow police officers empathize with John in his sorrow. But they don't believe that the situation is anything other than it appears, even when there are a suspicious number of suicides occurring in the area. When John receives several hateful notes about his wife's death, he is even more convinced that Catherine was a victim of a homicide.
While Cardinal is unofficially trying to disprove the suicide verdict, his partner, Lise Delorme, is deep into an investigation of a sexual predator who molested a young girl, photographed the acts and posted them on the Internet. The pictures indicate that the abuse took place locally in the Algonquin Bay area of Ontario, Canada. From what she can gather, the abuse may have been going on for several years and possibly other young girls may be prey for this animal.
I was eager to read this book because the previous entry in the series, Black Fly Season, was one of my top reads for 2006. Although well written, By the Time You Read This didn't quite measure up to its predecessor. Where the book didn't work for me was in its choice of the villain. Certainly, it's scary to think of a trusted professional going off the rails. However, this character wasn't intrinsically interesting enough to carry the plot single-handedly. Very early in the book, it is clear that this character is evil and manipulative, and that reduced much of the suspense around the various suicides and their motives. The second villain, the pedophile, was pretty much what you would expect.
That being said, By the Time That You Read This still incorporated all the things that I love in this series, wonderfully evocative writing and most especially the strong characterization of John Cardinal. One might expect an officer of the law to be hard-hearted and tough. Although he can be that on the job, in his personal life Cardinal is a compassionate and loyal individual. During each of his wife's depressive episodes, he is supportive and caring and never blames her for her actions. Now that he has lost her as the focus in his life, you wonder where he will go from here. And that's the kind of question that makes me impatient to see the next book in the series.