“A well-turned-out, exciting, and at times downright
nail-biting traditional mystery, with satisfying emotional resonance.”
Elly Griffiths’s Ruth
Galloway series enters its 11th title with The
Stone Circle, featuring the single-parent archaeological specialist and DCI
Harry Nelson, who’s been gradually revealed to his family and his community as
the father of Ruth’s child. The pair met and had a brief passionate connection
that resonated into deeper emotions, but DCI Nelson was, and is, very married,
and the chances of him leaving his wife were always slim.
Now, an anonymous letter
threatens to bring back the violence that once brought Ruth and Nelson
together. It looks like it’s written by the criminal they battled—a man who’s
quite dead. But if that’s the case, who’s writing the letters that continue to
arrive?
While the crime-solving team struggles with what the threats mean, Ruth gets looped into the tension too, since the letter writer refers to a “stone circle,” one of the prehistoric religious sites in her region. Distracting her from actually tackling the clues is a new factor: Nelson’s wife Michele is about to add a new baby to his life, and Ruth is realistic enough to see that the baby will crush any remaining chance that Nelson would come to her and her daughter. Not that she wants him to. Well, not really. But it would be nice to have him desire to do so, wouldn’t it?
Griffiths spins a complex
crime tale that invades multiple levels of time, historic and otherwise. Her
greatest strength is the way she sketches, then delicately shade in, the very
human nature of investigators and the way their ability to see the relevant
strands of clues, motives, and opportunities is shaped by their personal lives.
In the long run, one of the crime officers who persists in following her
hunches will be the one to turn the case. But with enough warning to actuallu
stop the perpetrator from a new murder? It’s doubtful.
Series fans will appreciate
the strong presence in The Stone Circle of
Cathbad, a druid and dad, along with his daughter Madeleine, now a journalist
with dreams of investigative work herself. But of course the tension ramps up
most when the threatening letters begin to rope DCI Nelson and Ruth back
together around their daughter Kate and more:
“Nelson’s phone buzzes as he
goes up the stairs. He sees ‘Ruth’ on the screen and so waits until he’s in his
office to call back.
“’Ruth? What is it? Is it
Katie?’
“A deep sigh. ‘No, it’s not
Kate. It’s me. I’ve had a letter.’ …
“As Ruth reads, Nelson can
almost feel his blood pressure rising. He remembers the letters arriving when
Lucy went missing and then later with Scarlet. The same mocking, erudite,
menacing tone. She called from the depths
and you answered. It’s the same person, he’s sure of it.”
Because The Stone Circle loops back to Ruth and Nelson’s past, Griffiths
provides plenty of back-story for new readers of the series. And the
combination of an amateur sleuth who’s a professional investigator of graves,
Ruth, with a trained police investigator, Nelson, keeps the pace sharp and
quick, the insights clever, and the plot twists highly enjoyable.
Trust Elly Griffiths for a
well-turned-out, exciting, and at times downright nail-biting traditional
mystery, with satisfying emotional resonance and smart current issues raised.
PS: Looking for more mystery reviews, from cozy to very dark? Browse the Kingdom Books mysteries review blog here.
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PS: Looking for more mystery reviews, from cozy to very dark? Browse the Kingdom Books mysteries review blog here.
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