British author Val McDermid‘s thrilling novels about detective chief constable Carol Jordan and clinical psychologist Tony Hill continue to richly delve into the vagaries of modern crime and the psychological motives that propel people to do the unthinkable.
McDermid continues her high standards in her compelling ninth outing with Carol and Tony, whose personal and professional relationship take myriad detours. While “Splinter the Silence” excels as a gripping crime fiction, the novel also works as a tale about the power of friendship, the struggle to stay sober and the importance of allowing people into your life.
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"Splinter the Silence" By Val McDermid (Atlantic Monthly) |
“Splinter the Silence” finds Carol at loose ends. No longer with the police, Carol spends her days restoring a barn and drinking while Tony continues his clinical psychological work in Bradfield, England. The two are bound by a “complicated matrix of feelings,” though these platonic friends are no longer speaking. But when Carol is arrested on a driving under the influence charge, Tony is the only one who she can call and, much to her dismay, moves into her house to act as her personal sobriety coach.
Despite her troubles, Carol’s brilliance as a detective has not been ignored and she is drafted to lead a new Major Incident Team. One of the team‘s cases involves the supposed suicides of several feminists who have been outspoken about the issues of women and children exploited by sex traffickers. (TNS)