Another author, who based on one book alone, is sure to become a future favourite.
It’s the hottest July on record in London as architect Leila Syed drives to work. It’s an important day for her firm as her partner is pitching a major project. Halfway to the office, at 8:08am, Leila receives a frantic call from her assistant – they’ve misplaced the blueprints, the spare copies are in Leila’s locked office, and if her partner doesn’t have them asap then he will be late for the meeting. A stressed Leila races toward the office, parks, locks her car, and hurries upstairs to sort it out.
In the backseat of Leila’s car, in the sweltering heat, is her sleeping three-year-old nephew Max. Leila was supposed to drop him off at Nursery on her way to work. It won’t be until 11:25am, over three hours later, when Leila receives a worried call from her brother-in-law Andrew wondering why Max isn’t at Nursery that an in shock Leila will remember him. But by then it will be too late…
It goes without saying that Next of Kin was definitely, at times, a heartbreaking and distressing read. The death of a child (even a fictional one) in such a horrific, inconceivable, preventable way is always somewhat distasteful, even if it makes for an exciting and intriguing premise. And believe me, as soon as I read the book blurb for this I felt all of those things, and Next of Kin did not disappoint. It included everything in a thriller that I had been anticipating. The twists were riveting, and the emotions and dialogue were spot on. I was enthralled from beginning to end.
Next of Kin was divided into three parts:
Part One – The day of the incident and the aftermath. This section was mainly domestic noir, and the POV’s were Leila’s and her sister, Yasmin (Max’s mother), focusing heavily on grief, disbelief, blame, and shame, and family secrets of course. There was also some police procedure from a third POV – DS Chris Shepherd.
Part Two – A courtroom drama, unfolding mainly from the perspective of the accused – Leila.
Part Three – Six weeks after the verdict. And, boy oh boy, did those twists just keep on coming. What a mind blowing conclusion.
Kia Abdullah’s two previous novels, Take It Back and Truth Be Told, have been on my radar for ages, but having now read Next of Kin I will be rushing to read them in record time flat. Not to be missed!