Quirky community, quirky crimes. Thankfully, McAvoy’s on hand to solve them.
Ishmael Piper, 51, lives in County Durham, on the North Sea, in drug-fueled disarray with his girlfriend, Heloise, their 7-year-old daughter, Delilah, multiple cats and a hectoring inner voice that plagues him no end. So addled is he that he doesn’t even notice the inferno that consumes him. Months later, a disturbed man kills a woman whom he identifies as a witch, dragging her into his cottage. Meanwhile, after a dangerous case that “nearly killed them both,” DS Aector McAvoy and his boss and best friend, DSU Trish Pharoah, are on extended sick leave. McAvoy is comfortably ensconced with his wife, Roisin, and their children. He contemplates the upcoming 70th birthday party of his distant mother, Cecilia, with dread. The festivities are indeed unpleasant, with McAvoy feeling like a dismissed 10-year-old and Roisin insulted by a drunken guest. But it’s also where McAvoy gets an earful and then some from ebullient Big Harry about the death of Ishmael, the troubled son of rock legend Moose Piper and the best friend of McAvoy’s annoying stepbrother, Felix Darling. Something about the story he’s told feels off, and McAvoy can’t help but investigate. Shaggy plotting and sly, discursive storytelling are part of this long-running series’ charm. Witness transcripts, multiple perspectives, and even a book review are woven into McAvoy-focused chapters, delivering pieces of the puzzle through full-bodied characters and the anecdotes that accompany them. All the while, the engaging chemistry of Aector and Roisin, a series trademark, is on full display.
An irresistibly charming detective cracks another colorful case.