Tuesday, 2 June 2026

Review: The Castle in the Glen

The Castle in the Glen The Castle in the Glen by Rhys Bowen
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Emma Callander is a young Australian woman working in London for a publishing house, she has written one quite successful novel and is struggling to find a subject for the second. In fact, after her last relationship ended she has been thinking about returning to Australia, even if there is nothing/no-one there for her.

Then her boss takes her with him to see one of the publisher's biggest clients, fellow Australian Iris Blackburn. Iris has started writing a new book featuring her famous Scottish detective but she is suffering from dementia and can no longer finish it. Iris asks Emma if she will finish the book for her. At first Emma is horrified, she doesn't really like the books (too gritty) and for an unknown author to attempt to write about an iconic character feels like sacrilege. But once she starts reading the first few chapters Emma is hooked, this is very different to the other books, it is Inspector Melrose's first case, the murder of a young woman on the Isle of Skye.

Iris insists Emma goes to Skye to get a feel for the island, but there Emma discovers the case might not be fiction, because many of the events in Iris's draft took place, just in 1904 rather than in the 1930s. Yet the events were so disturbing that people still remember it.

Although I guessed what had happened, and why, fairly early on it didn't spoil my enjoyment of the book or how the mystery unravelled.

I received an ARC from the publisher via NetGalley.

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Review: The Castle in the Glen

The Castle in the Glen by Rhys Bowen My rating: 4 of 5 stars Emma Callander is a young Australian woman ...