From Publishers Weekly
Starred Review. In Herron's dazzling third Zoë Boehm adventure, the second to appear in the U.S. (after 2004's
The Last Voice You Hear), the struggling London PI gets mixed up with, among others, a suicidal widower, a battered wife, a baby-faced giantess and a disgraced policeman. Stirred and shaken, the result is potent and surprising, as Zoë scrambles to stay ahead of her creditors. Soon after she's hit by a big back-taxes claim and her car is stolen, Zoë receives a call from a robbed jeweler, Harold Sweeney, who offers a reward big enough to cover her bills. Two thieves, including one armed with a crossbow, took things Sweeney couldn't tell police about. All Zoë has to do to collect her reward money is identify the two men, but the case proves far from simple. Herron's tale, as the title suggests, is suffused with death, but without a needlessly high body count. Smart, dogged and never down for the count, Zoë is a fine addition to the ranks of female PIs.
(Oct.) Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
From Booklist
The seamy side of Oxford, England, takes center stage as lives and plans collide in this bleak crime novel. Tim Whitby, ready to commit suicide after the death of his wife, meets Kay Dunstan, an abused wife, at a local hotel. When he sobers up, he remembers her black eye and believes she was reaching out to him for help. Meanwhile, brothers Baxter, Arkle, and Trent Dunstan rob a jewelry store, and private investigator Zoe Boehm needs money for back taxes. When Zoe is hired to find the jewelry-store robbers, events are set in motion, leading to tragedy, as she and Tim try to protect Kay from the wrath of brothers-in-law Trent and the sociopathic Arkle, as the two blame Kay for the death of her husband, Baxter, whom she killed in self-defense. They also want the money Baxter has hidden. Double-crosses, revenge, and violence permeate this novel, full of well--developed but (except for Zoe and Tim) mostly unlikable characters. British noir reminiscent of Jerry Raine's
Smalltime (1997).
Barbara BibelCopyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved