I would like to thank Netgalley and Penguin UK - Michael Joseph for a review of The Hangman's Song, the third Edinburgh based police procedural to feature DI Tony McLean.
Tony has been seconded to the Sexual Crimes Unit where he is involved in a raid involving prostitutes being shipped out of Edinburgh, a most unusual occurrence but he doesn't really have the time for it as his former team in CID keep looking to him for guidance so it isn't long before he's involved in investigating a spate of highly unusual suicides. If he wasn't busy enough his girlfriend Emma wakes up from her coma with almost total amnesia.
The Hangman's Song is an excellent, absorbing read that I found difficult to put down. It has a bit of everything with Mr Oswald's trademark hint of the supernatural, an intricate plot, great characterisation and personality clashes.
The two plots, the suicides and the prostitutes, run side by side throughout the book and have some very unexpected twists and a couple of more obvious ones. They are cleverly done with one step leading to the next although the suicide one has the team baffled for longer - the modern police force does not pay for hunches or coincidences so it is difficult to progress the case with Acting Superintendent Duguid pressuring him to close them as suicides.
The supernatural element, which is never intrusive, comes from the amnesiac Emma thinking she sees ghosts and receiving visits from troubled souls. To an unbeliever like myself who always avoids any hint of super/para weirdness Mr Oswald makes it palatable and acceptable, if not quite believable, by making Tony a sceptic who can mostly find a rational explanation for it.
Tony McLean is a great character. He is an honest, kind, moral man determined to do a good job in the face of strong opposition, but then he can afford to be as he has inherited enough money that he doesn't have to work. He is unpopular with his peers and can't seem to meet his boss without an argument but he gets the job done with his integrity intact. His spats with his superiors paint them as petty, narrow minded individuals but very recognisable as people we've all dealt with. It's well done.
I thoroughly enjoyed The Hangman's Song and have no hesitation in recommending it as a good read.