I ordered a batch of cheap books online during the first lockdown, desperate for new reading material while the library was closed. Most were read and discarded, but among them was a Marsali Taylor book, which I loved so much that since then, I've been tracking down the series and working my way through it in order.
The Body in the Bracken opens with Cass arriving at her policeman friend Gavin's family home for Christmas. Their friendship is tentatively blossoming into something more, but when they go for a romantic walk, they stumble over a body. Cass sails back home to Shetland, leaving Gavin to investigate, but it isn't long before the death is shown to have links to Shetland meaning that Gavin arrives on the island. Cass is also very much involved in helping solve the mystery, displaying her usual courage and practical common sense in the process - a refreshing change from the usual run of heroines who just get in the way.
Marsali Taylor is rapidly becoming my favourite whodunnit author. She is brilliant at evoking a sense of place - I've never been to Shetland, but I feel that if I ever do, I will recognise it from her books. Her descriptions of ships and sailing will make the most determined landlubber want to set sail, while references to the scenery, culture and folklore of Shetland are scattered lightly throughout, adding a unique flavour but never overwhelming the story.
Taylor doesn't shy away from the difficulties of building a relationship between globetrotting, independent Cass, whose true home is the sea, and land-loving, crofter/policeman Gavin, who has more than once had to investigate a crime where Cass has been a suspect.
Fans of the previous books will enjoy meeting Anders, Rat, Cat, Peerie Charlie, Magnie & Co once more. These characters are so well-rounded and believable that it's hard to realise they only exist within the pages of these books. I finished The Body in the Bracken with a real sense of regret that it's not possible to meet these people in real life!
This can be read as a stand-alone novel, but I'd recommend reading through the series in order, since the same characters recur and you get to see different relationships building and changing. Recommended for anyone who likes a good mystery with a strong sense of place, living characters and not too much violence & gore!