In a kind of shift, Tursten gives us the perp at the get go. The trouble is, evidence. If I had one complaint it would have been how long it took them to hunt for the place where the killer wrapped his victims. Then again, if it had been earlier in the investigation, there would have been no story to speak of!
This was a rather creepy plot with a very, very creepy suspect. Learning about his past only made the whole tale all the more mired in the muck that became his life. As a stalker, he had a plan. He didn't employ sophisticated methods for staking out his victims, and he had a repetitious modus operandi. It was still difficult to get a handle on him.
The office politics are complicated by the fact that her long-time partner has become the second in command to their unit's new leader, and that situation in itself became unethical as hell. When the unit leader becomes one of the suspect's victims, Irene uncovers evidence of an affair that goes even higher up the commanding food chain. Clearly her boss is screwing her way to the top, and leaving a mess in her wake.
At the same time, Irene, herself, has become the victim of a stalker, and while it seems to be the same suspect, it turns out to be a character from a previous book with a heartbreaking plot. Ultimately, she discovers the perp was, in fact, stalking her, too.
Once she gets a thought about something from the man's past, she does a little more investigation - the unit leader being in the hospital with a badly damaged esophagus from a failed strangling makes her former partner authorize pulling out all the stops in running down all the threads that can be pulled to ensnare the suspect. Irene gets the results she was looking for, and heads off to the summer cottage to meet up with her husband, Chef Kristen. It is time to close it up for the season, and in the drive toward the Norwegian border, she realizes she is being followed. Her cell is, predictably dead but the area has poor reception, anyway. Now she must rely on her intimate knowledge of where her cottage is and how to lure the suspect away from her beloved husband and their home.
Irene Huss is a smart cookie. She is an intuitive seeker of justice with a streak of empathy for even the worst perpetrators. Tursten paints characters with deeply disturbing defects - much as James Lee Burke does - and like Dave Robicheaux, Irene uses what she gleans about the suspect to take things to their logical conclusion. Often she puts herself in danger, but you know she is so clever that she can flip the switch on a perp in a heartbeat.
I know I am nearing the end of the series, so far, which saddens me. I want to see how Irene's life goes and how things ultimately shake out in the Violent Crimes Unit. And I don't want it to end, yet!