crime time
Home Latest News Reviews Features Interviews Profiles Web News, Features & Reviews Magazine Links Contact Us
  
Follow Crime Time on Twitter
  



Death
In A Cold Climate
A Guide to Scandinavian
Crime Fiction

by Barry Forshaw

Published Jan 2012
Available
from Amazon

Crime Time is edited
by Barry Forshaw


More Book Reviews

Now, It's... Noir Theatre!
www.crimetime.co.uk

Edge Of Dark Water Joe Lansdale
pre-order from Amazon

Good Bait by John Harvey
Review in The Independent

Raylan By Elmore Leonard
Pre order RAYLAN

WEB NEWS, FEATURES & REVIEWS

feature: Ten Great Crime Novels That You Should Have Read
www.sabotagetimes.com

There's a kind of novel that can only be a crime novel. They are short. They are sharp – ostentatiously so - they are cool and the people are cold.

news: Modern Day Cold War Thriller To Harvill Secker
www.booktrade.info

Alison Hennessey, Senior Crime Editor at Harvill Secker, has acquired World English Language rights to thriller Plan D by Simon Urban

feature: The Year of Translated TV Dramas
eurocrime.blogspot.com

The announcements have been coming thick and fast over the last few days regarding new to the UK dramas from mainland Europe

review: Vanished By Liza Marklund
www.amazon.co.uk

This is a strange mix

feature: The Blaggers Guide To George Pelecanos
www.independent.co.uk

The man Obama likes to take on holiday

feature: Altar Of Bones: A Literary Sensation But Who Dunnit?
www.amazon.co.uk

The publication of a crime thriller whose plot rests on a global conspiracy is fast inspiring its own, real-life literary conspiracy

The Serpent Pool Martin Edwards
Dea Parkin

The Serpent Pool is the fourth in Martin Edwards' acclaimed Lake District series starring DCI Hannah Scarlett and historian Daniel Kind.

This series has become a gem in thoughtful, contemporary crime novels. For readers who enjoy a strong sense of place with the past a location in its own right, and who seek interesting, clearly drawn characters as much as a gripping story, these books tick all the boxes.

The Serpent Pool sees the two main protagonists more definite about their feelings for each other than in previous novels. Hannah, in particular, is struggling to contain her emotions as she tries to reconcile herself to life in a newly purchased, spectacularly spartan house with partner Marc. This will-they-won't-they dilemma has become the fulcrum for the series, adding spice and flavour to the murder mystery driving each book.

The key murder in The Serpent Pool, which raises the curtain in a sinister and attention-grabbing opener, proves not to be the last, while a six-year-old suspicious death which Hannah is working on – she's in charge of Cumbria's cold case review team – has overlapping dramatis personae which might suggest a connection. The personalities – such as Wanda the frosty sex goddess, Fern the irreverent, greedy DCI – who inhabit the novel are fascinating and offer glimpses into intriguing lives. This is one of Edwards' great strengths: he is not afraid to set his novels very much in the now and unlike some more reclusive writers is immersed in modern culture. This extends to an understanding of business and institutional politics; Edwards' unambiguous exposition of which provides yet another facet to this appealing, fast-paced book.

However, one of the novel's main protagonists is a historian and Edwards also delights in revealing the past. As always, it is the past which Daniel Kind is researching which supplies the underlying theme. In The Serpent Pool, this is murder as a fine art, as expounded by Victorian essayist and opium addict Thomas de Quincey. If that sounds grotesque, it's not a false lead, and there are powerful elements of Gothic horror at work in this book. The Serpent Pool is the darkest of the four Lakes novels and possibly the most rewarding.

The Serpent Pool is published by Allison & Busby

Posted at 9:55AM Friday 29 Jan 2010

Search the News Archive