Detective Inspector
(DI) Nick Dixon of the Avon and Somerset CID is still recovering from his last
case (one that landed him in the hospital) and has just returned from a week holiday
on Cyprus. Still a little jetlagged, he’s pulled into a new case. Isobel Swan,
a student at Brunel School, has been found murdered. The police need someone
undercover inside the school to track down what might have happened. And Dixon
is a graduate of a school in the same town, St. Dunstan’s. He knows how public
schools work.
Dixon knows even
more than the police realize. Isobel looks exactly like Dixon’s school-time
girlfriend, who disappeared and was never seen again. Dixon intuitively knows that
the same killer is at work. Technically, he should not be involved in the case
because of his previous connection. But now he has the chance to find Isobel’s
killer, and what happened to his own girlfriend 17 years before.
Swansong is Damien
Boyd’s fourth DI Nick Dixon mystery, and it’s a riveting read.
Damien Boyd |
Posing as a
teacher in training, Dixon talks to teachers, staff, and students, sitting
through lectures (to maintain his cover) but also carefully watching. Several
of the teachers and staff have connections to St. Dunstan’s – either as
employees or students. And Dixon knows that one of them must be the killer.
Assisted by
Detective Constable Jane Winter (also Dixon’s current girlfriend) and a police
team, Dixon looks at both the past and the present to find the murderer. Boyd’s
novels are a combination of mystery and police procedural, and they underscore
just how much tedious and often repetitious “slogging through” happens in a
murder inquiry.
Swansong is another winner for Damien Boyd.
Related:
Top photograph: Rugby School in England,
photo via Wikimedia
Commons. This is not school
featured in Swansong, but it is
similar.
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