An enjoyable read. A change from my usual fantasy/scifi fare - a ‘police procedural’, whose definition I was a bit unsure about when I started it.
A police detective investigates a murder in a contemporary English provincial city. I believe it’s based on Salisbury, an historic location fairly close to me but the author makes only limited references to that and doesn’t emphasise it’s touristy aspects.
I liked the very recognisable contemporary society and characters she sketches out. It includes people who struggle to cope in society (eg some youngsters who try to survive by bag snatching and can’t hold jobs) through to an unpleasant country club ‘old boys network’. The lead detective, relatively senior in the hierarchy, has a sad backstory and isn’t exactly a modern day Sherlock Holmes. But he’s competent and has to cope with mislaid evidence, slow forensics, staff sickness. A nice realistic touch compared to police dramas with instant high tech analysis of crimes.
The plot is intricate. A web of connections emerges between apparently unconnected individuals. I guess I had to suppress the realism that keeps trying to emerge when I read fiction - that most murders are simple but tragic cases centred on dysfunctional families or gangland rivalry. It wouldn’t be much of a fiction if the plot didn’t try to give us something more complex, worth investigating!
It’s not at the darkest end of crime fiction but violence and child abuse feature from time to time. Tactfully done I think though that’ll be a matter of your sensibilities..
Maybe the resolution at the end, with so many threads being tied up in quick succession, was the aspect least to my liking. I’d have preferred less of rush of revelations; maybe spaced out a bit more. But then I’m unfamiliar with how this genre paces itself.
An accidental read for me. The author is someone I’ve stumbled across online. She isn’t quite self published but almost effectively so, with this coming from a small publisher, and apparently assisted from working in writer’s workshops.
I did enjoy the story; it kept me interested, well written, and well drawn characters. There’s several more in this series and I’m sure I’ll dip into them in the future. Plus side of 4*.