Ratings1
Average rating3
This originally appeared at The Irresponsible Reader.
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One fateful day, Tilly, a veterinary student in Cambridge goes to the bookshop she works at to open for the day. Inside, she finds the owner of the shop, her boss, hanging and clearly dead. She calls the police, who (unlike Tilly) realize that this was not suicide and begin their investigation right away.
While the investigation goes on, we spend a lot more time with Tilly and her coworkers as well as the family of Dennis Wade than you do in most Crime Fiction. Tilly is haunted (practically literally) by what she found. Her other coworkers are focused on trying to act appropriately in this situation, or worried about their jobs. Wade's widow, her sister, and the Wade's son all react in very different ways. His poor widow's life is shattered, her pain and lost-ness is palpable – just great work on Beavley's part, although watching what Tilly goes through may be more devastating.
Meanwhile, DCI Barrett, DI Palmer and their team start their procedure – knowing full well they need to close the case early for the good of the city, the Wade family – and because no one wants to spend Christmas (which is just around the corner) finding out why a body was left hanging. When other bodies start to be discovered, the pressure builds (internally and externally) and yet the procedure has to continue. Even when the procedure involves things like thoroughly vetting Wade's son (with a criminal record) and spending a good deal of time pursuing other dead ends.
Beavley's work showing the way the police have to tick off every box, have to turn over stone – even when they are virtually certain that no answers will be found by doing so – just to move on to another stone. There's no maverick cop saving the day here. No detective relying on instinct. Just dedicated professionals doing their jobs the way they're supposed to do them to get the result they need. It's really kind of striking that in the ocean of “police procedurals” out there, just how few actually rely on the procedure.
When the answers come – they come from going through all the steps and no one is more surprised than the detectives who uncover it. It feels as authentic as you could want. The depravity uncovered by these detectives is the kind that makes you glad this is fiction, so you can pretend that such things only happen in books. And you will keep turning the pages until you get to the bottom of everything.
You get a much better sense of Tilly, a couple of coworkers, and the Wade family than you do the detectives investigating the case – which isn't to say they're strangers to the reader. But by and large, these are primarily people doing a job - with the emphases on the job, not the person.
I'd have appreciated more time with the family and friends of some of the later victims – just to see Reavley get to show off a little. We get a little taste with the second victim's family – just not as much. But their reactions are so different from Wade's family and friends, it'd be great to get more time seeing that.
One tangent – I'm counting on readers to comment on this – there's a golf club mentioned a couple of times in the book, “The Gog Magog Golf Club” to be specific. Now, when I read that name I think of the figures and places mentioned in Ezekiel and Revelation. Neither of which is suggestive of a stroll along the greenways or putting around. Is this the kind of names used in England? In the US, courses are named after hills, valleys – that kind of thing. Not names steeped in apocalyptic visions. It's a minor point, but it really threw me.
This is (I believe) the second book to feature DCI Barrett and DI Palmer and their team – I'm curious about how they work together both before this case (also book related) and in the future. But this works well as a stand-alone, too. You don't have to sign up for the long haul to get anything from this. A solid mystery, one of the best procedurals I've read in ages, and a depiction of the aftermath of violent crime that you won't easily forget. A Murder in the Dark will stick with you.
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My thanks to Bloodhound Books for the invitation to participate in this tour and the materials (including the book) they provided. The opinions expressed are all mine, however.