Time of death
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9781622318902
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Booklist Review
*Starred Review* In the thirteenth entry in the series, police detective Tom Thorne is on holiday with his new love, Detective Sergeant Helen Weeks. They've planned the perfect outing: no long walks and a decent pub with a toasty fire. Then the body of a young girl is discovered and another teen goes missing in Polesford, Helen's hometown. Helen feels compelled to offer moral support when the husband of an old friend is arrested, and the media descend on her. Helen has not been back to her hometown in 25 years, and for good reason, as the town holds some very unhappy memories for her. Meanwhile, Thorne begins to suspect that the police have arrested the wrong man and feels his adrenaline kick in as he mulls possible scenarios. He calls on his tattooed friend, coroner Phil Hendricks, for investigative help, and their clever banter has Thorne forgetting completely about his Cotswolds vacation. Billingham conjures many moods in this suspenseful thriller: Helen's melancholy, the kidnapped girl's terror, the exhaustion of the wrongly accused, and the tetchiness of the Polesford police, who resent Thorne's intrusion. This is a multilayered, expertly crafted look at the many moving parts of an investigation and the terror unleashed by a crafty killer.--Wilkinson, Joanne Copyright 2015 Booklist
Publisher's Weekly Review
At the outset of Billingham's slow-burning 13th Tom Thorne novel (after 2014's The Bones Beneath), the detective inspector's girlfriend, Det. Sgt. Helen Weeks, persuades him to abandon their original holiday plans and head instead to Polesford, the small Warwickshire village where she grew up, after she recognizes a childhood friend, Linda Bates, on the news as the wife of a man accused of abducting two teenage girls. Even though she hasn't seen Linda for decades, Helen feels a strange pull to help her old friend, and Thorne always relishes a new case. It's been three weeks since Jessica Toms disappeared and two days since Poppy Johnston vanished-both appear to have accepted rides from Linda's husband. Despite the husband's claims of innocence, evidence mounts against him, including traces of DNA that place Jessica in his car. Thorne takes a backseat role as he assists Helen in what becomes a deeply personal investigation that builds to a surprising and satisfying climax. Agent: Sarah Lutyens, Lutyens & Rubinstein Literary Agency (U.K.). (June) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.
Library Journal Review
In this 13th of the series (after The Bones Beneath), London detective Tom Thorne and Helen, his cop girlfriend, are on vacation. When the body of a teenage girl turns up in the northern village of Polesford and another girl goes missing, a local man is quickly arrested. Helen decides she and Tom should go to help the wife of the accused, who turns out to have been her school classmate, even though Helen hasn't been home in 25 years and there are major hints of terrible secrets in her own youth. Neither Tom nor Helen has any official standing, but he soon finds troubling reasons to believe the police have the wrong man. With the help of his flagrantly gay pathologist friend, Tom finds insect evidence that contradicts the established time of death, a point vital in this case in which a twisted pedophile has cleverly thought of nearly everything in framing someone else. Verdict Billingham is skilled at ratcheting up the tension through plot twists, developing memorable characters including Thorne, and having them grow in successive tales. This one is marred, however, by a melodramatic ending that strains credibility. Still, Billingham's many fans won't want to miss it, and Thorne certainly is likely to return.-Roland Person, formerly with Southern Illinois Univ. Lib., Carbondale © Copyright 2015. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Kirkus Book Review
DI Tom Thorne and his lover, DS Helen Weeks, return to Helen's hated hometown in Warwickshire to confront some ugly accusations and some even uglier secrets. Now that he's finally found the time to take Helen away from London to the Cotswolds for Valentine's weekend, Thorne (The Bones Beneath, 2014, etc.) is distraught to see a broadcast on the telly that has Helen packing her bags again when they've only just arrived. But Helen is determined to leave with or without him for Polesford, a place she has little reason to love, once she recognizes her classmate Linda Jackson as the wife of Stephen Bates, who's accused of kidnapping two 15-year-old girls. DI Tim Cornish listens patiently as Thorne notes the circumstantial nature of the evidence against Steve, but he's confident that they've got the right man banged up. So is the rest of the town, which quickly turns on Linda for standing by her man and Helen for poking her nose into their business. When searchers find the corpse of Jessica Toms, the forensic discoveries seem to tighten the noose around Steve's neck even further. But Thorne grows more and more skeptical, and as the evidence against Steve continues to pile up, he enlists his old friend, pathologist Phil Hendricks, to poke holes in the case against Steve so that he can identify the killer, who's devised an unusually devious way to fudge the forensics, before he can kill his second victim, Poppy Johnston, whose fate Billingham follows one heartbeat at a time. Despite hints to the contrary, the crime and the investigation are routine, and the killer is a cipher. What lingers in the memory is the group portrait of the Polesford locals brutally closing ranks against a man they're certain deserves to die. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Booklist Reviews
*Starred Review* In the thirteenth entry in the series, police detective Tom Thorne is on holiday with his new love, Detective Sergeant Helen Weeks. They've planned the perfect outing: no long walks and a decent pub with a toasty fire. Then the body of a young girl is discovered and another teen goes missing in Polesford, Helen's hometown. Helen feels compelled to offer moral support when the husband of an old friend is arrested, and the media descend on her. Helen has not been back to her hometown in 25 years, and for good reason, as the town holds some very unhappy memories for her. Meanwhile, Thorne begins to suspect that the police have arrested the wrong man and feels his adrenaline kick in as he mulls possible scenarios. He calls on his tattooed friend, coroner Phil Hendricks, for investigative help, and their clever banter has Thorne forgetting completely about his Cotswolds vacation. Billingham conjures many moods in this suspenseful thriller: Helen's melancholy, the kidnapped girl's terror, the exhaustion of the wrongly accused, and the tetchiness of the Polesford police, who resent Thorne's intrusion. This is a multilayered, expertly crafted look at the many moving parts of an investigation and the terror unleashed by a crafty killer. Copyright 2014 Booklist Reviews.
Publishers Weekly Reviews
At the outset of Billingham's slow-burning 13th Tom Thorne novel (after 2014's The Bones Beneath), the detective inspector's girlfriend, Det. Sgt. Helen Weeks, persuades him to abandon their original holiday plans and head instead to Polesford, the small Warwickshire village where she grew up, after she recognizes a childhood friend, Linda Bates, on the news as the wife of a man accused of abducting two teenage girls. Even though she hasn't seen Linda for decades, Helen feels a strange pull to help her old friend, and Thorne always relishes a new case. It's been three weeks since Jessica Toms disappeared and two days since Poppy Johnston vanished—both appear to have accepted rides from Linda's husband. Despite the husband's claims of innocence, evidence mounts against him, including traces of DNA that place Jessica in his car. Thorne takes a backseat role as he assists Helen in what becomes a deeply personal investigation that builds to a surprising and satisfying climax. Agent: Sarah Lutyens, Lutyens & Rubinstein Literary Agency (U.K.). (June)
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