Mima
Wilson lives alone on the island of Whalsay in the Shetland Islands. Her
husband died decades before in a fishing boat accident. Her son and
daughter-in-law live nearby; a grandson lives in Edinburgh with his family and
a second grandson, Sandy Wilson, is a police officer with the Shetland police
in Lerwick, the islands’ largest city.
An
archaeological dig is underway on Mima’s property, as students are excavating
what appears to be a 14th-15th century structure. Mima
loves having the students around, providing tea and a warm kitchen to talk.
Then Sandy
finds his grandmother dead, shot with a shotgun outside the house. It looks
like an accident – a neighbor, Ronald Clouston, was shooting rabbits at night. Ronald
and Sandy have been good friends since they were children.
Detective
Jimmy Perez leads the investigation and agrees that Mima’s death looks
accidental. But he hangs around, asking questions, telling everyone he’s simply
finishing procedural matters. He has no ostensible reason, but something is
niggling. A few days later, Perez is called by one of the students at the dig,
telling him she needs to talk with him. When he arrives for their meeting, she’s
not there. Her body is found at the dig, and it looks like an apparent suicide.
Red
Bones by Ann
Cleeves is the third in the Detective Jimmy Perez / Shetland series, first
published in 2009. Cleeves unwinds the story slowly, swirling in family
jealousy, Shetland history, academics behaving badly, and Perez’s own romance to
create a captivating story.
Ann Cleeves |
Cleeves has published seven mysteries in the Jimmy Perez /
Shetland series, including Raven Black (2008), White Nights (2010), Blue Lightning (2011), Dead Water (2014), Thin Air (2015), and Cold Air (2017). She’s also
published eight mystery novels in the Vera Stanhope series (also a television series),
six Inspector Stephen Ramsay mysteries, and several others works and short
stories. The Jimmy Perez novels are the basis for the BBC television series “Shetland.” Cleeves lives in northeastern England.
Red Bones is
done extraordinarily well. The readers and the characters aren’t entirely sure
this is truly a murder mystery until about three fourths of the way through the
novel. But it doesn’t matter; the book is crafted so well that we simply get
wrapped in the story.
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