Elliot F. Sweeney's debut is an accomplished piece of gritty London Noir, with some profoundly disturbing and harrowing themes. 43 year old Dylan Kasper is a former police officer whose life fell apart 5 years ago with the suicide of his `14 year old daughter, Rosie, leading him to become a recluse, leaving all remnants of his former life behind. He is divorced from his wife, Carol, no longer in the police force, he ended the relationship he had with DS Diane McAteer, seeking solace in the demon drink, often wondering if there is any point in him being alive. A haunted man weighed down by guilt, he is now renting, living with former psychiatrist, Dr Steiner, and her cat, Marmite, and working in a rough pub for money, It is at a gym that he meets the young traumatised and self harming Tommy, feeling a connection, so when he is offered the job of protecting him from Tommy's father, Professor Saul Berkowitz, he accepts.
He is horrified when Tommy commits suicide, it raises the ghost of Rosie, and it is this that pushes him on his quest to find out why the vulnerable Tommy felt he had to kill himself to save his family. Despite facing grave dangers, Kaspar cannot let go, putting little thought or strategy in what he does. H keeps stumbling into trouble, although his expertise in boxing helps to keep him alive. He reconnects with McAteer, allowing him to draw on the police resources that he needs, but none of this prevents him being hit by tragedy, and the thought crosses his mind that the time has let his investigation go. However, he is persuaded to return, this time thinking carefully until the bones of a plan begin to emerge. Kasper uncovers the desperate pressures that Tommy had crumbled under, his desire to do all that he could to support his sister, Harriet, but it was never going to be enough, and learns of the nightmare terrors Tommy and Harriet faced as children.
Sweeney treads very unsettling territory, creating a wide, disparate and mesmerising cast of characters, veering from the villainously ruthless, the criminal, the good, to the vulnerable. This is a dark gripping story that will not be for everyone, beautifully written and well plotted, inhabited by some unforgettable characters, my favourites included Dr Steiner, Jazz and Mani, and which culminates in a surprising achievement of a semblance of justice. The central protagonist, Kasper, having only just survived by the skin of his teeth, begins to sees the glimmers of a possible future, something that seemed out of reach previously, when he considers becoming a PI. Highly recommended. Many thanks to the publisher for an ARC.