Please welcome author Paula Messina back to the blog
today…
The
Secret Hangman
by
Paula Messina
The Secret
Hangman by Peter Lovesey begins with Inspector Peter Diamond receiving a
letter from a secret admirer. Far from mysterydom’s cuddliest detective,
Diamond is surprised any woman is interested in meeting him. Nevertheless, the
woman who has the hots for Diamond optimistically suggests they meet at the
Saracen’s Hotel on Thursday evening.
Diamond wouldn’t
be Diamond if he wrote the date down in his calendar. It’s fair to guess
Diamond doesn’t own a calendar of any sort. Besides, he put the secret admirer
out of mind as he quickly moved on to search for a missing mother, Delia
Williamson.
The next day, a
woman is found hanging from a swing’s crossbar in Bath’s Sydney Gardens. You
don’t need to be an avid mystery fan to know with absolute certainty that the
dangling woman is Delia Williamson.
Her death is
obviously a suicide. At least that’s what Diamond and everyone else believe
until the pathologist points out “two sets of ligature marks.”
Murder it is.
Diamond returns to
his office to find a chocolate cake in wait. The secret admirer strikes again.
After Diamond and crew polish off the cake, they attempt to trace Williamson’s
final hours. She worked her shift as a waitress at Tosi’s. Did she leave with
the waiter Luigi or with the last diner, Dalton Monnington, a Jacuzzi salesman?
Or was the murderer closer to home? Say her live-in lover, the rather cool
Ashley Corcoran? Or is it possible that Danny Geaves, Williamson’s former
partner and the father of her children, had it in for her?
Diamond wants to
speak to Geaves, only he’s vanished without that proverbial trace.
Until he is found
hanging from a bridge.
Meanwhile,
Diamond, his larder empty, goes grocery shopping and manages to drive over
another customer’s bags. After Diamond pays to replace her destroyed food, the
owner invites him for a drink that night, which is how Diamond meets Paloma
Kean and her son Jerry, a devote Christian who volunteers at hospitals in the
area.
Another woman is
found hanged, and days later, her missing husband is found suffering from a
similar fate. When a third woman is found at the end of a noose, it’s obvious a
serial killer is on the loose. Diamond begins a frantic search to find the
third missing husband before it’s too late.
Hangman
takes lots of twists, and Diamond runs through his list of suspects before
finally solving the who and why of the mystery. The only remaining question is
the fate of his relationship with Paloma Kean.
It shouldn’t come
as a surprise that we have a master plotter at work. Among the many honors
bestowed on Peter Lovesey (1936-2025) are the MWA Grandmaster Award for
Lifetime Achievement, the CWA Gold and Silver Daggers, and the Diamond Dagger
for Lifetime Achievement.
Lovesey’s also
great at spinning characters with real depth and personality. Peter Diamond is
a wonderful character worth revisiting in the other books in the series. He’s
irascible but vulnerable, not quite the curmudgeon he presents to the world,
and he has a sense of humor. Diamond’s still reeling from the murder of his
wife Steph three years before Hangman begins, and the scenes with Paloma
are touching and tender. It’s impossible not to root for Paloma to appear in
the next mystery.
The series also
boasts an admirable cast of supporting characters. There’s the well endowed
Georgina, Diamond’s boss whom he frequently locks horns with, and his
underlings, the delightful Ingeborg, the insufferable John Leaman, and the
long-suffering Keith Halliwell.
Readers enjoy
visiting locations mentioned in their favorite books. Arthur Conan Doyle died
in 1930, taking Sherlock Holmes and John Watson with him to the grave—at least
in theory. Nearly one hundred years later, fans still flock to the non-existent
221B Baker Street, perhaps expecting Mrs. Hudson to open the door and invite
them to wait upstairs for Holmes’ return. So it’s not surprising that another
well developed character in the Diamond series is Bath itself. Diamond climbs
hills and descends into Bath’s many caves. The places mentioned are real, not
figments of Lovesey’s imagination.
While reading Hangman,
I had the sense I could visit the places described and pop in for a pint
at the Old Crown, maybe even chat up Diamond himself, or perhaps spy on Paloma
and Diamond when they meet up at the Saracen’s Hotel for a little tipple. It
turns out Lovesey used to conduct tours of Bath.
I was convinced
that I had figured out early the connection between the three ill-fated couples
and the murderer. I resisted the temptation to jump ahead and confirm whether I
was correct. Of course, I’m not spilling the beans. You’ll have to read The
Secret Hangman to find out whodunnit. I can tell you this: Peter Diamond
and crew are well worth your time.
Amazon Associate Purchase Link: https://amzn.to/4fFP6Nw
Paula Messina ©2026
Paula Messina writes the Donatello Laguardia stories, which are set in Boston’s North End during the 1940s. They appeared in the Best New England Crime Stories 2024 and 2025 and another Donatello Laguardia short story is scheduled to appear in Black Cat Weekly. She lives near America’s first public beach.



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