Please welcome back Paula Messina to the blog
today…
The Finisher
by Paula Messina
In The Finisher, the nineteenth
installment in the Peter Diamond Investigation series, Peter Lovesey weaves
sexual depravity, human trafficking, and a half marathon into an entertaining
mystery that keeps the reader guessing until the end.
Lovesey fills his story with a cornucopia
of characters. First, there’s Diamond himself, a likable if irritable character
with a penchant for making and finding trouble. Among the suspects: Maeve
Kelly, who is not an athlete, or so her mother insists. When Maeve accidentally
destroys a valuable Toby jug marked for donation to the British Heart
Foundation, she feels obligated to train for the Other Half, Bath’s annual half
marathon. To her surprise, she has no trouble finding generous sponsors for
BHF. Maeve cannot back out. She has to finish the race, so she starts training.
Her fellow teacher, the athletic Trevor, provides Maeve with advice, advice she
is glad to do without. While running, Maeve hears cries for help and comes to
the aid of Olga, a Russian who was beaten and robbed. This chance encounter
blossoms into a close friendship.
Meanwhile, Albanians Spiro and Murat are on
the run after they escape the Finisher, the enforcer of human trafficking
victims. Spiro and Murat will pay with their lives if the Finisher finds them.
The Finisher has already killed and won’t hesitate to do it again. The day of
the race, Spiro believes there is safety in the Other Half crowds. He quickly
realizes that was wishful thinking.
Spiro isn’t the only one who encounters
danger at the half marathon. Twelve years before, Diamond helped put sexual
predator Tony Pinto behind bars for viciously attacking a woman. When he spots
Pinto in the pack of runners, Diamond realizes the long stretch up the river
didn’t cured Pinto’s predilections. Pinto is up to his old tricks harassing
runner Belinda Pye. When Belinda goes missing, Diamond is convinced Pinto
killed her and organizes a search for her body. Diamond’s instincts are on the
money. A body is discovered in one of Bath’s many abandoned quarries.
Lovesey is great at surprising his reader.
Just when the reader thinks he knows where the story is going, Lovesey pulls
the old switcheroo and yanks the reader in an unexpected direction. He also
employs subtle humor throughout. Lovesey is no slouch in the breathless prose
department. For example, here’s the novel’s opening:
“The city of Bath isn’t all about Roman
plumbing and Georgian architecture.
“It offers unrivaled facilities for getting
rid of unwanted corpses. Beneath the cream, sun-kissed squares, crescents and
terraces is a rat-infested underworld undreamed of by most visitors, a dark,
dank warren of cellars, vaults, culverts, sewers and drains.”
It’s easy to imagine the inestimable
Charles Dickens giving Lovesey a thumbs up.
Bath is as much as character as Diamond and
the rest of the cast. Maeve’s training takes the reader on the ups and downs of
Bath’s terrain. Diamond’s search for Belinda descends into Bath’s abandoned
stone quarries.
The cover of The Finisher, which was published in 2020, notes “fifty years of Peter Lovesey mysteries.” The author blurb says he wrote “forty highly praised mystery novels.” The number of books now is closer to fifty. The masterful, wry Lovesey, who received numerous awards and recognition, including being named Grand Master by the Mystery Writers of America, died this past April, but Peter Diamond lives. As do nearly fifty more novels for readers to savor.
Amazon Associate Purchase Link: https://amzn.to/4mFezaK
Paula Messina ©2025
Paula Messina is a native New Englander who writes contemporary, historical, and humorous fiction as well as essays. Her work has appeared in such publications as Black Cat Weekly, Devil’s Snare, Wolfsbane, Ovunque Siamo, and THEMA. She does not own a cat.


As always, Paula is concise and comprehensive. Since I know her to be a humor writer of great skill, I trust her comments on the humor in this collection and am going to try to obtain it form my library
ReplyDeleteJust last month a friend recommended Rough Cider and I've been enjoying that -- but had no idea there were so many MORE Peter Lovesey books, much less an entire series with a favorite protagonist. Thanks, Paula, for the recommendation!
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