Soft Summer Blood

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Pub Date Apr 01 2016 | Archive Date Feb 01 2016

Description

A seemingly open-and-shut case becomes increasingly complicated for Detective Inspector Liam McLusky in this intriguing police procedural.

It all seemed so simple: a murder; an obvious suspect; a shaky alibi: DI McLusky never had it so good. Until a second killing challenges all his earlier assumptions. With every new piece of evidence McLusky brings to light, the case becomes more complicated. Does it have its roots in a disappearance eighteen years earlier, or is it firmly based in the present?

Meanwhile, DI Kat Fairfield and DS Jack Sorbie are tasked with finding the daughter of a prominent Italian politician, who has disappeared while on a student exchange programme at Bristol University. Neither is overjoyed to be lumbered with a routine missing person’s case while McLusky heads a high-profile murder investigation. Until they find a dead body of their own…
A seemingly open-and-shut case becomes increasingly complicated for Detective Inspector Liam McLusky in this intriguing police procedural.

It all seemed so simple: a murder; an obvious suspect; a...

Available Editions

EDITION Other Format
ISBN 9780727885777
PRICE $28.95 (USD)

Average rating from 8 members


Featured Reviews

He's a man jogging on his own property. Then he's a dead man...

Severn House Books and Net Galley allowed me to read this book for review (thank you). It will be published April 1st.

When the police begin their investigation, Lusky thought it would be easy. The dead man was rich and has only a son to leave the money to. The old adage is follow the money. But the son has an alibi. It gets worse when other members of the painting set die.

He warns the last man but gets blown off. He thinks he's safe enough. He's not. Who would have wanted to kill them all and why?

The crime is old and mostly forgotten. There's a relative they don't know about. It looks like the murderer may get away.

Lusky keeps digging. While he's doing that, others in the office are pursuing a missing person case, reluctantly. Feeling left out of the more important investigation, she does a good job of looking but finds another dead body instead of the person she was seeking. This case is a bit odd, too.

There's plenty of police action to keep it interesting, the murders are tied to revenge and money, and the ending is shocking. Mr. Helton doesn't hold back anything.

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This is the first Liam McLusky mystery that I’ve read and I really liked it. I do have to admit though that it took me a bit to warm up to Liam, and I can’t quite put my finger on the reason why. As I read, I began to see that he was a bit more complex with more depth than I initially thought. I did eventually begin to like him and found him to be a fascinating character.

This book is well written with interesting twists and turns as well as an unexpected ending. It has all of the elements that make a great mystery. There were also references to the board game “Clue” which in some novels of this nature can have the tendency to be cheesy and overdone. However, that was not the case in this one. They were tastefully done and made me chuckle.

For those of you that enjoy a good British Police Procedural mystery, I recommend that you pick this one up. I’m interested to see where the next case takes DI McLusky.

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This is the fourth book in the Bristol setting, featuring Detective Inspector Liam McLusky. The author has also written six books set in Bath featuring Chris Honeysett an Art Dealer and Private Investigator. Mclusky is worried about his forthcoming police medical as well as hoping he can persuade his estranged wife to move in with him in his rented apartment.
Mclusky and Detective Sergeant ( Jane ) Austin are called out to a murder of a wealthy businessman who has been shot. His son who inherits is under suspicion until there is another similar killing, a friend of the dead man.
DI Kat Fairfield has been given the unenviable task of locating the missing daughter of an Italian diplomat who has been studying Art.
I enjoyed the locations all of which are familiar to me. McLusky does not always play by the rules but usually gets away with it.
Enjoyable and recommended. Look forward to the next book. See my full review on Euro-Crime website. .

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Dead men and missing girls… 4 stars

When out jogging around his extensive garden one evening, wealthy Charles Mendenhall is shot dead. Detective Inspector Liam McLusky is at first suspicious of Mendenhall’s son, who didn’t get on well with his father and seems keen to get his hands on his inheritance. But a few days later another man is killed, probably with the same gun, and it turns out he was a friend of Mendenhall’s, one of a group of men who are friends through their mutual enjoyment of painting (pictures, not walls!). Now McLusky must try to find out if something in the men’s background has led someone to be targeting them. Meantime Detective Inspector Kat Fairfield is annoyed to be given the job of tracking down a missing girl, the daughter of an Italian politician. Fulvia is legally an adult and normally the police wouldn’t have got involved unless there had been reason to fear that something may have happened to her, but when politicians are involved, cases suddenly get shoved up the priority list. But then another girl dies, and she had attended the same art college as Fulvia, so suddenly finding Fulvia takes on a more serious aspect.

This is a solid police procedural, the fourth and apparently final one in a series about Liam McLusky. I’ve read an earlier one, and this has the same strengths and slight weaknesses. The characterisation is good, especially of Liam himself – I wasn’t so keen on Kat, who seemed permanently grumpy. The main plot is interesting and I failed to work it out – there is a clue early on, but if you miss it then the ending rather comes out of the blue. Actually I did spot the clue, but the solution still took me by surprise, since it had never been mentioned again in the couple of hundred pages since it appeared. Helton often includes art and artists in his plots, probably because he’s a painter himself when he’s not writing. It always adds an extra element of interest – a good example of incorporating the “write what you know” principle into his stories. The secondary plot relating to Fulvia really seemed like an unnecessary distraction to me. It didn’t go anywhere very interesting, and merely served to add to the length of the book. It would have been a tighter and better read, I think, if Helton had just concentrated on the main case. There is a minimum of bad language – none that I can remember, in fact – and while Liam is not problem-free, neither is he an angst-ridden drunk.

However, there’s too much padding in terms of telling us everything Liam eats or drinks throughout the case, and his on-off relationship with his girlfriend didn’t feel as if it added anything to either the story or Liam’s character. Liam mostly follows procedure, which I always prefer, but occasionally steps over the bounds in ways that I didn’t find altogether credible, and unfortunately that applied particularly to how the book ended, meaning that the last few pages left me rather less enthusiastic than I had been up to that point.

Overall, though, the strengths outweigh the weaknesses. The beginning, when we follow Charles Mendenhall in the lead-up to his death, is very well done, creating a great atmosphere of tension and mild creepiness. The investigation is slow, but keeps a steady pace so that it holds the attention, and there are enough surprises along the way to keep the reader guessing. I’m sorry that Helton seems to have stopped writing these – in fact, his most recent book (in a different series) was published in 2017, so it looks like he may have stopped writing altogether which would be a pity. His books may not be ground-breaking, but ground-breaking can be over-rated. Instead, they are solid well-worked-out mysteries, well written, with interesting plots and, in this series, a detective I’d be happy to spend more time with.

NB This book was provided for review by the publisher, Severn House.

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