Welsh
mystery writer Stephen Puleston
has two police detective series – Detective Inspective Ian Drake in northern
Wales and Detective Inspector John Marco in Cardiff in southern Wales. Apart
from being officers in the Welsh Police Service, the two have little in common.
Drake
is something of an obsessive when it comes to cleanliness; Marco seems much the
opposite. Drake is married with two daughters, with his police work taking a
serious toll on his marriage; Marco is divorced.
Both,
however, are dogged when it comes to procedure and thoroughness.
Dead
Smart is
a “prequel novella” for the John Marco series. The series includes three
full-length novels; I suspect the prequel novella was written after the three
main stories. A man is found dead, his throat cut, in the parking lot of the
Cardiff football (soccer) stadium at the end of a game. Despite the hundreds of
people milling about after the game, no one seems to have witnessed the death
or anything connected to it.
Marco
and his detective sergeant, Pierce Boyd, have the victim’s identity, but little
else. There’s no apparent motive, and even the victim’s estranged wife and son have
any suggestions as to whom might have killed the man. The man’s cell phone is
missing, and that becomes the jumping off place for the investigation. And what
looks like only murder turns out to be something far more involved and complex.
Stephen Puleston |
Puleston
writes from inside his detectives’ heads and skin, and the reader quickly comes
to see what is happening through their eyes. Much of what they see and do is
based on experience, plodding through details, wading through records like bank
statements and car registrations – exactly how much police detective work is
done.
Dead Smart is a good story, and a good
introduction to the Marco series.
Related:
Top photograph: The skyline
of Cardiff, Wales.
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