On Halloween, the body of a young black girl is found at Druid's Altar, a local beauty spot, and the signs suggest sexual assault and a ritual sacrifice. DI Handford and DS Ali discover the girl has a murky past, and things become even more sinister when it appears that the prime suspect doesn't even exist.
Lesley Horton (1939-November 2018), was a British novelist and author of a series of crime novels featuring Bradford based Detective Inspector John Handford. Horton is a former schoolteacher who took early retirement in order to begin a career as a writer. She is also a past chair of the Crime Writers' Association.
The novel deals with the issues of racism, religion, inner-city youth and ultimately murder. The author writes of which she knows. She was a teacher in an inner-city school in the area of Yorkshire, England in which the books are set. With a growing Asian population, racism continues to be an issue in schools AND in police work in and around Bradford. This title was written sympathetically and the reader can't help but identify with the people from both sides of the racial divide. The protagonist Inspector John Handford, is a professional policeman who tries not to let his personal life interfere with his investigations. However, this time his wife is a teacher at the school where the murder victim attended and he realizes that the lines between his professional life and his personal life are blurred...
Shayla Richards was just fifteen when her body was found on Druid's altar on the moor. Of mixed race parentage, Shayla had been missing for several weeks, was a known truant and a troublesome teenager. However, she didn't deserve this! Handford and his team set about finding her murderer, but they meet up with loads of opposition along the way...
It was an okay read. I thought that it was much longer than it needed to be and I dislike writing that describes every movement of the protagonists as it just slows the action down. I think that it was clearly based on the Jamie Bulger case. There were always two clear choices of who did what but I am not sure whether the protagonists remained constant in character throughout the plot. But, I finished the book and would recommend for a fairly pedestrian read. DI John Handford and DS Khalid Ali are okay but in this book I think I preferred Warrender!
I didn't expect much and I was happily surprised at how the novel developed into a gripping mystery. The plot twists and turns kept on delivering surprises (I actually didn't see some of them coming). This was the first book that I had read by this author and I look forward to reading more.