Owen Mullen
is a Glasgow writer who is also quite productive: He’s published seven crime
novels in the past four years with an eighth scheduled next year. His first
book, private investigator Charlie Cameron’s initial appearance, was nominated
for the McIlvanney Crime Book of the Year in 2017.
Cameron’s third
adventure is Before the Devil Knows You’re Dead (Bloodhound Books,
2017), in which he is asked to find a missing surgeon who disappeared after he
filed a malpractice complaint about another doctor at the hospital where they
both worked. Cameron is reluctant to take the case. If the police can’t find
him, he doesn’t think he can either. But the money is too good to pass up so he
asks a few questions. He learns the hospital would have been happy for the
surgeon to disappear, as his testimony threatened its reputation and
certification. The incompetent surgeon had as much to lose from the complaint,
if not more. And the patient’s husband is distraught over her debilitating injuries
and is looking for someone to take his anger and frustration out on.
Cameron
doesn’t find much evidence for any of the three beyond motive and he’s trying
to gracefully withdraw from the case when a member of the Glasgow city council
is found hanging from a bridge one snowy morning. The councilor’s sister isn’t
ready to accept the police verdict of suicide and wants Cameron to investigate.
Cameron’s questions about the councilor’s recent activities reveal he’d been
talking to a major player on the Glasgow crime scene, whom Cameron has crossed
before.
Sean Rafferty
is even more rotten than his father, who’d been the worst kind of thug. Sean
has acquired a veneer of respectability and needs the cooperation of the Glasgow
city council to push through a commercial development that would make him a
legitimate businessman. Unfortunately, the council remembers his father all too
well and has no desire to work with the son, so he applies some injudicious
pressure to some of the more vulnerable council members, which draws Cameron
back into his life.
Nice juggling of the two investigative story
lines and a couple of well thought-out surprises in the plot. An effective
portrayal of contemporary Glasgow in its grit and glamor serves as the backdrop
of the story. Sound piece of tartan noir. Mullen is an author to watch.
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File Size: 647 KB
·
Print Length: 272 pages
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Publisher: Bloodhound Books (March 21, 2017)
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Publication Date: June 16, 2020
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ASIN: B08B7P6GK1
Aubrey
Hamilton ©2020
Aubrey
Hamilton is a former librarian who works on Federal It projects by day and
reads mysteries at night.
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