This week Kaye George offers
her thoughts on another author and series I have not read. According to the all-powerful
and all-knowing Amazon, The Sound of
Broken Glass published in February of 2013 is the 15th novel in
a series that began in 1993 with A Share
In Death.
The Sound of Broken Glass by Deborah Crombie
Crombie just gets better and better. This
Kincaid and Gemma British procedural mystery gripped me from beginning to end.
The story opens with the glass in a shop
window tossing one of the characters back fifteen years. From there, alternating
the present day story with the older one, the reader can barely get up for a
drink of water, following the stories of Andy, a gifted guitarist with an
inauspicious beginning in life, his fellow band members, his manager, and a
producer who may be the making of Andy, and tracing the stories of two
barristers who are found dead in exactly the same manner, apparently by the
same murderer, though there seems to be no connection between them.
The Crystal Palace building, built in
1851 as a modern marvel of engineering, and enduring as a spectacle in another
form at another site well into the next century, was destroyed by fire in 1936.
The south London area where it last stood is now called Crystal Palace, and it
is here that the story takes place.
Gemma is on this case while her husband,
Kincaid is on Daddy Duty for their three adopted children. That’s because the
youngest, three-year-old Charlotte, can’t attend her nursery school because
she’s terrified of new people and situations, so Kincaid is stuck. He’s getting
restless being away from work this long. Gemma’s partner, Melody, an unlikely
cop from a privileged background, gets herself into some trouble that not only
gets in the way of the investigation, but threatens to ruin things for several
people.
Not wanting to ruin this read for you,
I’ll quit here. But there’s a lot more to this tale than I can squeeze in this
review.
Bonus: a delightful tour of London, with
local history, thrown in by way of the chapter headers.
No comments:
Post a Comment