from description: Birmingham, England, UK, 1943.
While the whine of the air raid sirens might no longer be rousing him from bed every night, a two-decade-old unsolved murder case will ensure that Chief Inspector Mason of Erdington Police Station is about to suffer more sleepless nights.
Young Robert McFarlane’s body was found outside the local church hall on 30th September 1923. But, his cause of death was drowning, and he’d been missing for three days before his body was found. No one was ever arrested for the crime. No answers could ever be given to the grieving family. The unsolved case has haunted Mason ever since.
A cold case that has bothered Sam Mason for years comes to the forefront again when Robert McFarlane's sister comes to Sam on her annual visit about the death of her brother. This time, however, she brings an old newspaper clipping about what child murder that took place three years after young Robert's.
Interested, if not exactly hopeful, Sam is determined to follow any lead. As it turns out, there are similarities Sam can't ignore...and yet cannot decipher. Sam's wife makes the most important connection that sends Sam and Constable O'Rourke through many twists and turns as "new" old cases keep turning up.
The concept is interesting and the investigation kept me involved. Slow in places and sometimes a bit repetitious, The Custard Corpses still managed to provide an intriguing and unusual historical police procedural.
Read in April. Blog review scheduled for ????
NetGalley/BooksGoSocial
Historical Police Procedural. March 25, 2021.
I've read a couple of books in Mulrooney's Tyrone Swift series and a couple in her Siv Drummond series and enjoyed them.No witnesses.
Detective Tyrone Swift is invited to stay with Afan Griffith, an old friend living in a small community in rural Pembrokeshire. Cut off from the rest of the world, with no mobile signal or Wi-Fi, something’s got Afan worried.
But Afan isn’t there to greet Swift when he arrives. The next day, Swift discovers Afan’s body on a lonely stretch of the nearby coastal path — stabbed to death.
I did enjoy this comical crime novel, there is plenty to amuse the reader in the amateur detection of Ethelred and Elsie. A bit too overtop for me to want to read another, but it was a fun satirical adventure.
I had a look at his other titles--they all contain the word "herring." Ok, so when I saw this title I was immediately reminded of Farewell, My Lovely by Raymond Chandler, but when I looked at Tyler's other "herring" titles, Agatha Christie was well represented: Ten Little Herrings, The Herring in the Library, The Herring on the Nile, etc. Chandler and Christie were certainly the source of the Herring titles. :)
NetGalley/Alison and Busby
Comic Crime? April 22, 2021. Print length: 227 pages
The Custard Corpses and Farewell My Herring are great titles! I would have picked them up, too. :)
ReplyDeleteThe titles do set them apart, don't they? :)
DeleteAhh, for a minute I got thoroughly confused with Murder in Pembrokeshire with The Pembrokeshire Murders, which is based on a true story. This is a trio of authors I didn’t know before either!
ReplyDeleteI've read and enjoyed Mulrooney before, but I was a little confused by this title as well--because of the UK mini-series about the Pembrokeshire Murders. I haven't watched it, but I'd read something about it.
DeleteUnusual titles do pique my curiosity and these books sound interesting too. I'm especially intrigued by The Custard Corpses not only by its title but also the setting and the time period too.
ReplyDeleteStrange titles, for sure. The Custard Corpses has a neat and unusual premise. :)
DeleteWell at least these do sound different and very cool titles and settings. Of all, I think the one I'm most interested in is the Mulrooney series!
ReplyDelete