I would like to express my gratitude to Charlotte Philby, John Murray Press, Baskerville, and Netgalley for the opportunity to read the Advanced Reader Copy of this text. This is what I thought of the novel…
Before delving into this book, I was attracted to the bright cover and the initial description, ‘Two detectives. One explosive case.’ I was further attracted by some of the other reviews I had read about the novel that pointed at two female leads, and slow introductions to their backgrounds. However, in reality, I struggled to get into this book from the outset. I struggled with the pace, which I think I had presumed would be a lot quicker than it was. The introduction of the characters, particularly, alcoholic Ramona, was interesting but at the same time, the author is drip-feeding the reader, and it is not at a speed to quench an insatiable thirst.
If a story is explosive, I expect to be hit with some sort of crime or scandal in the beginning and then watch as people get involved to solve it. Instead, this novel is led by first understanding the characters and so my initial interest has not been tailored for. I’m less interested in the detectives’ families (or lack of) in the beginning, and the tour around London, and more interested in what the ‘dirty money ‘ actually is so that I have a better understanding of why the detectives’ lifestyles, characters, relatives, job experience, etc is important. I also found the flipping between perspectives to be confusing because the main characters were, in my opinion, not being anchored to anything meaningful, i.e., what is the point of them and why should I care about them.
Unfortunately, I decided to stop reading after giving it a good go but not really understanding where I was in the plot. My brain struggled to give the novel its full attention and so even though the pace was slow, I found I was unable to recollect where I was at when I switched from Ramona to Madeline, and back again. There was also something about the actual writing style that had me tripping over myself and needing to reread sentences to get the full gist of it. Agagin, this may be down to my own expectations of what I wanted to/or thought I should be reading.
I am only guessing, but from the ratings and reviews, I gather the story does pick up pace and it becomes a book that readers will either love or hate. As such, I rate the book an average 3 out of 5 stars so as not to taint the views already out there.