by Reginald Hill ‧ RELEASE DATE: Aug. 14, 1990
Yorkshire police duo Supt. Andrew Dalziel and Insp. (now Chief Insp.) Peter Pascoe (Ruling Passion, Underworld) puzzle over a simple-seeming domestic murder—in a grimly witty tale bound to raise Hill's considerable reputation to new heights. Dalziel, a muddled witness to the killing of next-door neighbor Gall Swain, rushes over to her house to find her husband Philip and her lover Greg Waterson with the body. Both men testify that Gall was depressed, strung-out, and bent on suicide; Philip had accidentally killed her trying to wrestle the gun away. But that isn't what Dalziel saw, and his doubts, intensified when Waterson calmly disappears from a hospital bed minutes after leaving his statement, lead the department along a trail from Swain's fanatically religious business partner Arnie Stringer and his drab daughter Shirley Appleyard (what's become of the wastrel seducer her father forced to marry her?) to Waterson's unhappily estranged wife Pamela (has she been under her husband's orders to steal drugs from the hospital where she's a nurse?)—with casually mordant detours into a series of gang beatings (whose latest victim is gay Sgt. Wield) and hints of skullduggery at Swain & Stringer's latest building project: a new garage for the police department. Hill signals his serious intentions from the outset with a subplot—Dalziel is shanghaied into playing God to Swain's Lucifer in dazzling Eileen Chung's presentation of medieval mystery plays, while Pascoe tries to figure out who's been sending Dalziel letters threatening suicide. But Hill doesn't really need the subplot to give the relation between Swain and Dalziel as his nemesis depth or resonance, because the events that unmask Swain are quietly, cumulatively hair-raising all by themselves. Hill's most ambitious Dalziel/Pascoe novel yet—and one whose humor, keenness, and insight place him securely in the company of Ruth Rendell and P.D. James, and well ahead of most of their recent work.
Pub Date: Aug. 14, 1990
ISBN: 0440209358
Page Count: 448
Publisher: Delacorte
Review Posted Online: April 3, 2012
Kirkus Reviews Issue: July 15, 1990
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by C.J. Box ‧ RELEASE DATE: May 10, 2007
Middling for this fine series, which automatically makes it one of the season’s highlights.
Fired from his job as Game and Fish Warden after wrapping up his colorful sixth case (In Plain Sight, 2006), Joe Pickett returns to nab the perpetrator of the perfect crime.
According to his own confession, small-time lawyer Clay McCann, feeling bullied and insulted by four campers he encountered in Yellowstone Park, shot them dead. A ingenious technicality he’s discovered, however, prevents him from being tried and convicted. Wyoming Governor Spencer Rulon, a former prosecutor, can only slap McCann’s wrist, but he’s determined to figure out what Rick Hoening, one of the victims, meant by an email that hinted at secrets that could have a major impact on the state’s financial health. So he asks Joe, now working as foreman at his father-in-law’s ranch, to poke around the park while maintaining full deniability for the Governor. The situation stinks, but Joe’s so eager to get away from his wife’s poisonous mother and go back to his old job that he agrees, and in short order there’s a spate of new killings to deal with—some committed by McCann, some not. As usual, there’s little mystery about which of the sketchy suspects is behind the skullduggery. But, as usual, the central situation is so strong, the continuing characters so appealing and the spectacular landscape so lovingly evoked that it doesn’t matter.
Middling for this fine series, which automatically makes it one of the season’s highlights.Pub Date: May 10, 2007
ISBN: 0-399-15427-2
Page Count: 288
Publisher: Putnam
Review Posted Online: May 19, 2010
Kirkus Reviews Issue: March 15, 2007
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by Miranda James ‧ RELEASE DATE: July 16, 2019
By keeping the action limited to the college and its surrounding gossip network, James presents a sharply focused story that...
Murder on a college campus leads an informal investigator into interdepartmental drama that smacks of reality TV.
His longtime work in libraries has primed Charlie Harris (Six Cats a Slayin’, 2018, etc.) for lifelong learning. So when he has the opportunity to audit a class in the history of early medieval England at his alma mater, Athena College, Charlie jumps at the opportunity. He’s heard nothing but wonderful things about professor Carey Warriner, and the first day of class exceeds his expectations. There’s even another adult learner in the course, Dixie Belle Compton, who seems equal parts student and fashion plate. When Charlie chats briefly with Dr. Warriner after class, he overhears hints of some sort of conflict between the attractive professor and Dixie Belle. Not that it’s any of his business, but Charlie wonders how the two know each other outside class. Athena is apparently a hotbed of interdepartmental romantic scandals among the faculty. Although Dr. Warriner is married to a fellow professor, it’s possible that he’s been conducting himself with Dixie Belle on an informal basis. Charlie has a history of nosing his way into town gossip, so it’s natural for him to consult with his fellow Athenians about what might be going on, especially when Dixie Belle is killed before the second class meeting. Ably aided by large and ferociously friendly Maine Coon sidekick Diesel and his latest kitten addition, Ramses, Charlie uses his connections to separate fact from fiction. Will he be able to solve the case before the killer strikes again?
By keeping the action limited to the college and its surrounding gossip network, James presents a sharply focused story that celebrates the role of the armchair investigator and his informants.Pub Date: July 16, 2019
ISBN: 978-0-451-49112-1
Page Count: 304
Publisher: Berkley Prime Crime
Review Posted Online: April 27, 2019
Kirkus Reviews Issue: May 15, 2019
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