Review by Booklist Review
An inspector with the Public Security Bureau in a poverty-stricken village in northern China battles the forces of the Central Police Bureau to solve the murder of a young woman in this first in the Inspector Lu Fei series. The victim had returned home from the city of Harbin to care for her ailing mother a few weeks before her murder. She was found stitched up after having several organs removed, with "hell money" (fake money for passage to the afterlife) stuffed in her mouth. Police from the Central Investigation Division take over the case, immediately fixing on the obvious suspect: the victim's rejected would-be lover, a butcher. Inspector Lu Fei, a graduate of the foremost Police Academy in Beijing but relegated to this backwater town, risks everything to investigate on his own. Featuring jarring depictions of rural poverty, this is a riveting mystery, starring an underdog hero who battles CID police eager to bend evidence to promote their careers. A promising debut.
From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
A falling-out with a superior in Harbin City, China, results in Insp. Lu Fei, the hero of Klingborg's middling debut and series launch, getting transferred to the quiet township of Raven Valley, where he serves as the deputy chief of police. Lu's job demands little of him, until the body of 23-year-old Yang Fenfang, who worked in a Harbin bar and was living with her dying mother in Raven Valley, is found in her mother's house "hollowed out like a birchbark canoe." Yang's ex-boyfriend, a slow-witted butcher who flees the police interrogation, becomes the prime suspect, despite Lu's reservations. Those doubts are vindicated when he learns of two unsolved murders with the same m.o. Passages explaining how recent Chinese history, including the Cultural Revolution, have affected Lu's family compensate only in part for an underdeveloped lead and the superficial presentation of the country's politics and tensions. This by-the-numbers thriller falls short of the standard set by such other serial murderer novels set in repressive regimes as Harald Gilbers's Germania: A Novel of Nazi Berlin. A confident style suggests Klingborg can do better. Agent: Bob Diforio, D4EO Literary. (May)
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Review by Library Journal Review
Haines's Independent Bones features PI Sarah Booth Delaney, caught up with protecting a visiting professor of Greek literature at Ole Miss whose radical feminism may have sparked murder (40,000-copy first printing). In Jonasson's latest, Una is teaching in a remote Icelandic village when she discovers dark secrets the polite if distant villages have kept hidden for generations--perhaps involving The Girl Who Died (50,000-copy first printing). A peasant girl is murdered in a northern Chinese village, and exiled inspector Lu Fei takes the case in Klingborg's Thief of Souls (75,000-copy first printing). Brought back by Lupica in 2018, PI Sunny Randall investigates the suicide of best friend Spike's 20-year old niece in Robert B. Parker's Payback. In 1910, a senior barrister is found dead in a notorious London slum, and junior barrister Daniel Pitt endangers his family by investigating in Perry's Death with a Double Edge. In Walker's The Coldest Case, applying the facial reconstruction tools used on ancient skulls to the skull of a long-dead murder victim leads Bruno, chief of police in fictional town in the Dordogne, to the activities of a Cold War-era Communist organization. With A Peculiar Combination, Louisiana librarian Weaver detours from her beloved Amory Ames books to launch a new series starring Electra "Ellie" McDonnell, who cracks safes with locksmith uncle Mick to make ends meet in World War II England and agrees to help the government when she's caught (40,000-copy first printing).
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Review by Kirkus Book Review
A maverick Chinese police detective hunts a twisted serial killer. In the Raven Valley Township of northern China, Inspector Lu Fei is drinking himself into his customary oblivion at the Red Lotus bar when he's called to a brutal murder scene. The young victim, Yang Fenfang, has been "hollowed out like a birchbark canoe." Suspicion immediately falls on her boyfriend, Zhang Zhaoxing, who works as a butcher. Once he's arrested, Lu's bosses at the Public Security Bureau are content to end the investigation and incarcerate Zhang. Klingborg takes the time to lay out the structure and conventions of law enforcement in China, a welcome aid for Western readers. Lu finds a kindred spirit in sarcastic medical examiner Dr. Ma Xiulan, who takes his rejection of her sexual advances in stride. No forensic evidence implicates Zhang. Though Lu thinks the young man is innocent, he's overruled by his superiors, who order that Zhang be kept in custody until more conclusive evidence against him can be found. A wave of protests has little effect on this decision. But the discovery of two similar murders in nearby Harbin gives the investigation new life. Terse dialogue dominates this series debut, which wraps its depiction of contemporary Chinese society in the tropes of police novels. Even when the righteous Lu goes too far in interrogating a suspect, he keeps on going. Klingborg's twisty, tense police procedural seems poised to kick off a series. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.