It is a crime filled Monday as
this week Kaye George reviews The Widow
by Fiona Barton….
“The Widow” by Fiona
Barton
This crime
novel meanders between quite a few points of view, and different points in
time, but the story is only enriched by the style, never confused. The reader
is always eager to get back to the next step.
There is The
Widow, who is the central character, of course. Her husband has just died and
she’s playing the grieving widow, but we learn immediately that she feels
relief because he’s gone and there will be no more of what she calls “his
nonsense.”
The story
starts in 2010 with the death of the widow’s husband, a man who has been
hounded by the police and the press for the last three years because of the
crime everyone suspects her husband committed back in 2006, where part of the
story also takes place. The detective, DI Bob Sparkes, and the reporter, Kate
Waters, give their thoughts on the case, on the suspect, Glen Taylor, and his
wife, Jean.
The beautiful
child, Bella, has been missing since October of 2006 when she was snatched from
her yard while her mother, Dawn Elliot, left her there for what she always
insists was just a few minutes. By 2007, Glen Taylor was a serious suspect for
her kidnapping. The mother, Dawn, tells part of the story, too. She believes
her daughter is still alive after all this time and keeps the story before the
public as much as she can. After Glen Taylor is killed in a traffic accident,
Dawn and the others despair of ever learning where Bella is, either alive or
dead. The only hope is The Widow, who might know something. She does, in fact,
know quite a bit more.
The tension
and intrigue will take hold of you, draw you in, and not let you go until the
climactic end.
Reviewed by Kaye George, author
of Eine
Kleine Murder, for Suspense Magazine
Just started reading this. So far, I'm all in!
ReplyDeleteMeandering should be a negative but in this novel it enriches the narrative? Your first sentence caught my attention--and made me want to read the book.
ReplyDelete