From Publishers Weekly
The brogues and the blarney are back in fine form, but this tale doesn't have nearly the restless energy of All Souls, the previous Inspector Matt Minogue mystery. Brady brings the contradictions of modern-day Dublin vividly to life. On the bank of the now badly polluted canal, upscale young men in flashy cars with mobile phones look for whores, and the short life of Mary Mullen, a working girl with a taste for the finer things, comes to an unpleasant end. A junkie named Leonardo, who survives on Coca-Cola, lager and fear, believes he's being sought in her death and wonders if he should give himself up. Mary was his friend, but his alibi isn't impressive: he was breaking into a parked Golf GTI. Matt, meanwhile, has a pregnant daughter, a flatulent slob of a superior and a hot-tempered subordinate with a criminal twin brother. The bad twin is a close crony of the pair of brothers who are Matt's prime suspects in Mary's murder. Leonardo's torment is tedious, and we learn next to nothing about Mary. The mood is as thick as Guinness, but the plot's as thin as weak tea.
Copyright 1995 Reed Business Information, Inc.
--Ce texte provient d'une édition qui n'est plus publiée ou qui est non diponible.
From Booklist
The fifth in Brady's Inspector Matt Minogue series is another well-written police procedural set in Ireland. Brady excels in juxtaposing the cheerful robustness of spirit with the dark melancholy that permeates the true Irish soul. Policeman Minogue is a quintessential Irishman, with his keen wit, his own brand of sarcastic charm, and his dedicated, if occasionally world-weary, professionalism. His latest case involves Mary Mullen, a former prostitute whose battered body is fished out of a Dublin canal. Piecing together the story of Mary's dreary life, Minogue soon discovers that while she has managed to keep her name off the police blotter for several years, she may have traded the relatively "safe" career of prostitution for a much more dangerous one involving the Egans, a notoriously vicious Dublin gang. Solid writing, a clever plot, intriguing characters, and Brady's unique brand of suspense make this a good choice for most collections.
Emily Melton
--Ce texte provient d'une édition qui n'est plus publiée ou qui est non diponible.