This series gets better with each successive book. I enjoyed this series from the start, but after reading eight of them so far, I am just as hooked as a narcotics junkie. I got the first book of this series because the blurb on Amazon appealed to me. I had just finishing all the "Inspector Morse" TV series, as well as the sequel series, "Lewis," and the prequel series, "Endeavour." I craved more of that stuff, and this book series was a police procedural set in Oxford, England, just like the Morse stuff. So, I thought I'd give it a try. Now I have to say that within five minutes of finishing this book, I have already ordered the download of the next one from Amazon for my Kindle reader. -- Can't wait to start reading it, and that is precisely what I am going to do as soon as I finish typing this review.
This book starts out with the murder of a fairly well-to-do middle-aged woman who is in the process of a divorce. She is stabbed multiple times whilst in the foyer of her large, lovely home in a village near Oxford. There are numerous suspects of course, including her soon-to-be-ex-husband, and possibly his girlfriend, or maybe the victim's down-at-the-heels sister who despises her, or the neighbor who was in a heated dispute with the victim because of a pet who has been pooping on the victim's lawn, or.... well, you get it.
About 60% of the interest in these books is the actual murder mystery, and about 30% is because of the well-drawn characters and their interactions and their lives, and lastly, maybe 10% is just plain good writing.
By the time we get to this volume, the eighth book in the series, we are already very familiar with our protagonist, DI Hillary Greene, and we know how smart, how intuitive, and how driven she is. We know a fair amount about her life, her love life, her struggles living on a narrowboat on the canal, her late and unlamented criminal husband, and her co-workers. We are also familiar with the private lives of some of those co-workers, and it feels like we know them, at least to some extent. This is one of the reasons why we can't wait to read the next book. The cliffhanger at the end of this book was reason enough to pick up the next book, but I would've done so even without that "event." (I'm trying not to give out any spoilers.)
There is no doubt in my mind that I will be reading every single one of these books about DI Greene by Faith Martin, and I very well may be reading some of her other books. These "Inspector Greene" books have been fast-paced, easy-to-read, fun to try and figure out the mystery part of it, and the character development is good. My only criticisms are that I would like to see them a bit longer. At an average length of 230 to 240 pages, these books seem somewhat short. I think if they were longer, more like the average length of most novels that I've read, -- like 350 to 400 pages or so, -- that the added length could only enhance the reader's involvement with the characters and the story. This is a minor complaint, though. I'm still going to read them all. I enjoy them, and that's all that really matters.