The darkest evening

Ann Cleeves

Book - 2020

"On the first snowy night of winter, Detective Inspector Vera Stanhope sets off for her home in the hills. Though the road is familiar, she misses a turning and soon becomes lost and disorientated. A car has skidded off the narrow road in front of her, its door left open, and she stops to help. There is no driver to be seen, so Vera assumes that the owner has gone to find help. But a cry calls her back: a toddler is strapped in the back seat. Vera takes the child and, driving on, she arrives at a place she knows well. Brockburn is a large, grand house in the wilds of Northumberland, now a little shabby and run down. It's also where her father, Hector, grew up. Inside, there's a party in full swing: music, Christmas lights and... laughter. Outside, unbeknownst to the revelers, a woman lies dead in the snow. As the blizzard traps the group deep in the freezing Northumberland countryside, Brockburn begins to give up its secrets, and as Vera digs deeper into her investigation, she also begins to uncover her family's complicated past"--

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Subjects
Genres
Mystery fiction
Detective and mystery fiction
Published
New York : Minotaur Books 2020.
Language
English
Main Author
Ann Cleeves (author)
Edition
First U.S. edition
Physical Description
vii, 372 pages ; 25 cm
ISBN
9781250204509
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

When Vera Stanhope decided to seek a career as a copper, her father jeered she'd find real-life crime and criminals not at all like those in the Agatha Christie novels bookworm Vera so enjoyed. Now, after decades as a detective in the Northumbrian police, she knows the old man had it wrong. Even in bleak, icy northeastern England, there are country houses, vicars, privileged twits, murderers, and corpses waiting to be stumbled over. Cleeves has a fine time constructing a clockwork murder plot and using it to examine the lives in that circumscribed world. Inspector Stanhope looks, as she does in the celebrated TV series, "like a bag lady," and she edges near pathos as she makes her staff into the family she profoundly misses. Loneliness plays both sides of the aisle here, afflicting both Vera and the murderer she hunts. Those not wanting to wallow in the sociological side of this mystery should focus on Vera as she follows the clues, including the baby in the abandoned car. Remember to watch out for that avocado.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

CWA Diamond Dagger Award winner Cleeves's superb ninth novel featuring astute, irascible Det. Insp. Vera Stanhope (after 2017's The Seagull) finds Vera driving home late one night through rural Northumberland in a blizzard when she comes upon a car that's slewed off the road. The driver is gone, but Vera discovers a toddler strapped into a car seat. Soon after she transfers the child to her own car, she realizes that she's close to Brockburn, the once grand family home of the Stanhopes, and decides to go there. She last visited the place with her father when she was 15, and remembers that "the family had been unfailingly polite. That branch of the clan used politeness as a weapon of mass destruction." At Brockburn, the abandoned car's driver, a young woman, is found murdered behind the house. Vera assembles her loyal, if at times exasperated, homicide team to investigate, and comes to realize that the "whole case... was about families, about what held them together and what ripped them apart." This fair-play mystery brims with fully developed suspects and motives that are hidden in plain sight. Skillful misdirection masks the killer's identity. This page-turner is must reading for fans as well as newcomers. Agent: Sarah Menguc, Sarah Menguc Literary (U.K.). (Sept.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

In Cleeves's latest "Vera Stanhope" mystery, Vera is driving gingerly through the Northumberland countryside snow when she encounters a stalled car with no driver and a baby secured in the backseat. Grabbing the baby, she hustles to the nearest house--the seen-better-days Brockburn, where her father grew up and where a Christmas party is now blasting away. And there's a woman out front, lying dead in the snow. With a 100,000-copy first printing.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A murder investigation hits close to home for an experienced police officer in the north of England. Taking a wrong turn in a snowstorm, Inspector Vera Stanhope finds a car with only a baby inside. With no cellphone service, she drives to the nearest house, which just happens to belong to her estranged relatives. Vera's cousin Juliet and Juliet's husband, Mark Bolitho, are giving a dinner party in hopes of courting prospective donors to support Mark's plan of converting their estate into an art center, promoting Mark's artistic interests and keeping the faltering estate alive. When a farmer tied to the estate discovers the body of a murdered woman in the snow near the main house, Vera becomes involved in a case that bring her closer to her only family. The car belongs to a retired schoolteacher who often loaned it to Lorna Falstone, the mother of a baby son. The suspects in her murder include the dinner guests along with Juliet's snobbish mother, Harriet, and Dorothy Felling, a superior housekeeper who lives with her husband and child in a tied cottage. It seems unlikely that a madman wandered out of the storm to kill Lorna, who's never identified the father of her child. After the baby is taken to Lorna's parents, who own a farm nearby, a second murder spurs Vera and her team to investigate a tangled web of family connections and buried secrets. Fans will enjoy matching wits with Cleeves' eccentric sleuth right up to the dangerous surprise in her denouement. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.