The
Verge Practice by Barry Maitland (Allen & Unwin, 2003) is the seventh of the
excellent Inspector Brock/DS Kolla British police procedurals. While a Chinese
delegation waits to discuss a huge project, one of Charles Verge’s staff
members goes in search of the great man, only to find his young second wife
stabbed to death and Verge himself has disappeared. After months of fruitless
searching and Verge sightings all over the world, Scotland Yard pulls in a new
team led by David Brock, hoping for fresh insight. They go over all of the
original interviews and inquiries and find a couple of financial discrepancies
that lead to Spain, where Verge’s father was born. Suspicion points to one of
Verge’s staff and then down a different path, as Maitland piles misdirection
upon misdirection and then wraps up with a startling conclusion.
On one level this is a straight-forward police
investigation of a crime with a byzantine motive. On another level it considers
the nature of creativity: What sparks it? What kind of environment nurtures it
best? How is it turned into something useful and marketable? On still another
level – this is a complicated narrative – is the question of how well anyone can
know anyone else, even someone greatly loved. This query comes up in different
ways throughout the book.
Maitland, himself an architect, pulls out all
the stops in describing the way a large architectural practice operates and the
details of each of the buildings Verge designed. He contrasts the former nicely
with the small practice Verge’s first wife sets up for herself after their
divorce. There is an ugly little subplot in which one of the police forensics
specialists sneakily slides the blame for his mistake onto someone else, who
doesn’t understand she’s been thrown under a bus.
I have to say I am a little tired of Kathy
Kolla putting herself into senseless jeopardy. It seems to me she did something
similar in Silvermeadow. Here she
goes to Spain, without telling anyone where she is going, to single-handedly
dig further into the background of shady characters. They decided to publicly
humiliate her when they could just as easily have made her disappear. No one
would have ever known what happened. Her supervisors were rightfully enraged. Other
than that, I found this book to be a thought-provoking, multi-faceted piece of
crime fiction, typical of the series, and a solidly good read.
These stories are easier to find in the U.S.
than they were when I first discovered them about 10 years ago, but I still
have only managed to read about half of them, and those out of order. The website
of the author’s publisher shows a new Brock and Kolla was released in January
2019 after a hiatus of about six years.
·
Publisher: Arcade
Publishing (July 14, 2004)
·
Language: English
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ISBN-10: 1559707135
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ISBN-13: 978-1559707138
Aubrey
Hamilton ©2019
Aubrey
Hamilton is a former librarian who works on Federal It projects by day and
reads mysteries at night.
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