Her work has
been nominated repeatedly for awards and both Fifth
Son and Honour Among Men in the Inspector Green series were named
Arthur Ellis Best Novel for their respective years.
Fifth Son
(Napoleon
and Co.,
2004) is the fourth title about Green. The body of a man is found at the base
of an abandoned church in the small town of Ashford Landing, an apparent
suicide. The biggest mystery appeared to be the dead man’s name. After exhaustive
interviews, Green learned he was perhaps one of the Pettigrews, a family of
five brothers who all looked alike. The father was in a long-term care
facility, the mother dead. The only son still living in the area was the
youngest who hadn’t seen any of his brothers in years. One brother died young,
another was in a mental institution, the third living on the streets, and the
fourth in the United States somewhere. Follow-up yielded the information that the
brother who had been institutionalized was released and that he had missed his
most recent follow-up appointments. So Green began to search for three of the
brothers, assuming the dead man was one of them. In the back of his mind he kept
reviewing the scene where the body was found because he felt something was off.
This is a surprisingly complex story. What
appears to be a simple investigation of an unattended death effortlessly segues
into the study of the disintegration of a close family. Motivations for actions
taken long ago are thoroughly explored as is their impact on the present day. The
sadness of the family narrative is alleviated with amusing scenes about Green’s
frustrating home renovation, something any homeowner can understand, and his
attempts to establish a relationship with his teenage daughter.
The mechanics are well executed. The plot has no
extraneous elements, although that’s not always clear; all of the story threads
unfold in separate directions until near the end when they coalesce. Even the
minor characters, such as the chatty retired priest, are sketched thoroughly. Excellent
misdirection from the beginning when a case is made for one possible culprit
after another until the very end when the true one is revealed.
A thoughtful, nuanced piece of crime fiction with
unusual depth.
·
Publisher: Napoleon
and Co; 1st Edition (September 1, 2004)
·
Language: English
·
Paperback: 304
pages
·
ISBN-10: 1894917138
·
ISBN-13: 978-1894917131
Aubrey Nye Hamilton ©2022
Aubrey Hamilton is a former librarian who works on Federal It projects by day and reads mysteries at night.
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