The prolific crime writer Val McDermid begins a new series featuring an ambitious investigative journalist, Allie Burns, a Fife Cambridge graduate, a grunt reporter working for the Glasgow Daily Clarion in 1979. This is a particularly politically turbulent period of British history with its winter of discontent, the power cuts, the strikes, paving the way for the election of the Conservatives under the radical and divisive defining leadership of Maggie Thatcher. This book captures the time, with its culture, music, literature, films, the newspaper industry with its boys only culture which McDermid was a part of, lending an authenticity to her storytelling, with the social norms and attitudes of the era, the sexism and the misogyny, and the widespread prevalence of anti-gay attitudes that could ruin lives and careers.
Allie is lonely, and struggling to get allocated any meaningful stories, but she finds friendship and professional support from fellow journalists, Rona Dunsyre, and particularly Danny Sullivan with whom she builds a close relationship whilst working on 2 exclusive scoops that is to make both their careers. Their investigations take them into a world of danger, corruption, terror and a tragic murder. Danny first brings in Allie on a story that he picks up from his adopted brother, Joseph, who works as a junior clerk at Paragon Investment Insurance (PII) and with whom he has an uneasy relationship with. Danny struggles when it comes to writing his stories effectively and he wants Allie to help polish his story before presenting it to Angus Carlyle, the editor. Allie returns the favour when she uncovers an incendiary potential lead that involves the impending Scottish devolution referendum and the IRA.
Both Danny and Allie are natural born journalists, but have to fight hard to get themselves taken seriously in a cut throat business, neither can resist the lure of potential exclusives, and do not wait for them to land in their laps. Not everyone in the newspaper industry is like them, for so many others its the wages, the expenses, being one of the lads in their 'banter', the companionship of the hard drinking culture, not to mention the sheer swagger of the job, that keeps them going. This is a great start to McDermid's new series, Allie makes for a charismatic lead, on a sharp learning curve, whose world is torn apart when she discovers the murdered body of Danny at his home. I can see this appealing to many crime and mystery readers, particularly those interested in this interesting historical period. Many thanks to the publisher for an ARC.