This is a dark and atmospheric psychological crime debut from Australian Sarah Bailey, with DS Gemma Woodstock, set in the Aussie small town of Smithson, in New South Wales. It's a place where everyone knows everyone, yet is still full of secrets that come to be slowly revealed. The town is shocked when 28 year old Rosalind Ryan, a drama teacher, is discovered strangled in the lake, with roses surrounding her. Gemma is the main homicide detective, aided by her police partner, Felix. She is a mother, with a young son, Ben, and a partner who loves her, but whom she treats abominably. To be frank, her personal life is a car crash, she is having an affair with Felix, and obsesses over him interminably. In this character driven novel, the past comes back to haunt Gemma, and the past is where the answers to Rosalind's murder lie. This is a story of love, loss, grief, deception, secrets and tragedy, in a narrative that moves back and forth in time. The story is related primarily through Gemma's perspective.
This is a case that threatens the unravelling of Gemma, for she knew Rosalind from school. Rosalind was the charismatic, beautiful and popular girl, whom everyone adored and loved, although some, like Gemma, harboured darker thoughts of her. Gemma is a conflicted woman, she loved Jacob as a teenager, but he was seeing Rosalind. Jacob goes on to commit suicide, and Gemma has never gotten over that loss. Gemma's obsession with Rosalind in the past spills over to the present. In the meantime, Rosalind is an elusive character to get a hold of and there are a number of odd factors. Whilst being liked, she has no close friends. Her father is one of the richest people in town, yet Rosalind resides in a squalid home, but has expensive tastes, liked to drink and was taking medication for depression and anxiety. There are a host of suspects with motives, and Gemma investigates as secrets begin to tumble out.
This is a slow paced, multilayered read that is more about Gemma than Rosalind's murder. Admittedly, Gemma is a hard woman to like, irritating, deeply flawed and psychologically teetering all over the place with her haunted past. There are strong undertones of Romeo and Juliet to story, strengthened by the fact that Rosalind had been working on a reinterpretation of the play at school. It is a character driven tale, with elements of suspense and tension. I found it an entertaining read, with beautifully written prose. Many thanks to Grand Central Publishing for an ARC.