
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
Chief Inspector Shadow has a string of crimes: vandalism in the ruins of St Mary’s Abbey, a spate of break-ins in York, then a murder in a small Moorland village, where, surprise, surprise there are also signs of a break-in and vandalism in the local churchyard (shamelessly stolen from the blurb).
The victim, Kenelm Underhill was an independently wealthy man who co-owned a pet food company and was obsessed with Saxon history, particularly the legend of King Alfred’s Hoard which he allegedly buried locally when fleeing the Vikings.
Are all/any of the crimes related? Shadow finds the village is a hotbed of infidelity, jealousy, rivalry, and unrequited love. as the list of suspects and motives grows can Shadow pick through the evidence and uncover the perpetrator?
I requested this book after reading the previous book in the series. In the interim I purchased the first two books and discovered my feelings towards Chief Inspector Shadow had grown into active dislike. He's just unpleasant to his staff, a total stick-in-the-mud, and a culinary philistine. Hence why it has taken me ten months to finish a book I started reading three weeks prior to publication.
Now obviously picking up a book and putting it down for months on end doesn't help keep the characters straight but I couldn't really tell any of the suspects apart (obviously male versus female wasn't an issue) but best friend/brother/rival didn't really stand out in any way and it all became a bit convoluted and the number of crimes just grew and grew. Frankly, I though Sergeant Chang did better at spotting a crime than Shadow.
Clearly this series is not for me, I don't like a curmudgeonly detective or a distracting number of suspects where the clue to unlocking the crime involves a superhuman feat. I will no longer request books in this series, although I still like all the other books I have read by this author.
I received an ARC from the publisher via NetGalley.
View all my reviews
No comments:
Post a Comment