so I skipped from having read book 1 to reading book 3 in the series (just what was available in the library) and it seems like alot has maybe happened... and that little has maybe changed... 😉
I was reading this alongside/in the middle of Phil Rickman's 'Wine of Angels', and it was very clear how OK the writing is compared to the maybe better, maybe just more interesting, writing of his Merrily Watkins series...
...but it's read with Welsh accents 😃 and feels more connected to Wales 🙂
the two are kinda interestingly at different ends of a 'feeling' spectrum, with this novel very much on the friendly and cuddly and caring end 😆 Gezellig comes to mind... perhaps abit cwtch 🙂😉
wrt the overt emphasis on social issues I noticed in the first, this novel feels even more issue focussed, and is very much 'the gay novel'! 😆 VERY unsubtle again 😆 but kinda sweet and pretty well done in many ways... with a smaller spotlight on abuse within the church, domestic abuse, and dementia...
unfortunately the gendered stuff I wasn't sure about in the first book seems abit of a theme 😕 while the main character has been a senior police officer, and is now a successful illustrator... she's kinda involved as a favour/accessory to her now boyfriend, former underling - the guy she trained and took over her job when she left/got kicked out of the police. there's alot of "thanks love" and her insights and expertise still kinda coming over as well intentioned 'meddling', even tho they provide ALOT of the case breaks 🙄😆🙈
so definitely some gendered stuff, tho some interesting explorations of their relationship, including alot of emotional exploration.
I think the writing is for me abit Jean M Auel -like in the highly descriptive style, with nothing much left to the imagination... and having the mundanity of the most boring day narrated to the most detailed degree... 😬😆🙈
I didn't really care who did it... tho made the connection...
I also spotted more overt fatphobia/fat antagonistic stuff than I had noticed in the previous novel in the series 😕 nothing unusual there (and very present in the Phil Rickman novel too), but always disappointing.
🏳🌈
accessed as a local library audiobook, ably read by Rebecca Travers 🙂