The follow on from FOR REASONS OF THEIR OWN, GLASGOW SMILE is set (the title relates to something specific in the surroundings), in Melbourne, where the discovery of a woman's body stabbed and strangled late at night in the graffitied and dark tangled laneways of the innercity sets off a complicated investigation.

For those that haven't read the first novel, DI Robbie Gray and her offsider, new into town from very different locales in the NT, have some collective and individual baggage to lug around. Probably best to read my notes on FOR REASONS OF THEIR OWN to get the full gist of that, but this outing does continue many of the themes tackled in the earlier book.

The case at the core of GLASGOW SMILE is a bit of a teaser, not just because of the manner of the disposal of the body, which is odd. Propped up in an extraordinary position, carefully placed against a portrait on the wall, it's hard to tell if the placement is symbolic or misleading. The other problem is that there's a lot going on in Melbourne at the time of the killing - civil unrest, rising white extremism, corrupt government and a family desperate to hide some pretty dreadful secrets. All of which makes this anything but a straightforward investigation.

Which probably fits with the style of this second novel, which was anything but straightforward itself. The first in the series was tightly written and tense and enthralling as a result. This outing tends towards overwritten in places, which is a pity, because under all that noise there's a really good crime novel peeking out. Enough of it showing to provide impetus for the reader to stick with it, not enough to make it a resoundingly satisfying read though. Perhaps with a little paring down of the verbiage, and a strip back of some of the elements that didn't seem to go anywhere, this would have been a better outing in the Gray and Mac series. There's potential here, these two main characters are great, the plots have been engaging and really interesting, and the societal issues tackled deserving.

 

Author: 
Book Source Declaration: 
I received a copy of this book from the Author

The Glasgow Smile

Inside every person you think you know, there is someone you dont know. Contemporary crime thriller set in the grimy tangled innercity laneways in Melbourne.

In a grimy graffiti covered recess a woman is found stabbed and strangled. "why would anyone want to kill her, she was so ordinary." was the oft repeated phrase DI Gray heard when the name of the deceased was revealed. So, why then, she asked herself was the body found propped up in such an extraordinary position, almost as if she were intimate with the portrait painted on the wall. Was this death meant to be symbolic or was the placement merely a device to deceive.

Set against a background of civil unreest and rising white extremism, a government tained my corruption and a family desperate to hide secrets, DI Gray, along with her Indigenous officer Mac, while grappling with demons of thier own, must dig deep if they want to find a killer.

Was this a random thrill kill, politically driven or tragically personal. When an arrest is made, DI Gray realoses that not killers hold a weapon, maks dont always disguise, and the legacy of long held secrets can have tragic consequences.

PUBLISHER INFORMATION
Author: 
Publication Date: 
Mon, 05/06/2023
Publisher: 
Book Type: 
Series Name: 
No in Series: