Review of “Nowhere to Run” by Jack Slater
Most of the British detective novels I read feature a
Detective Inspector as their main character (and occasionally a Detective Chief
Inspector). I am a big fan of British police procedurals, including those by Ian
Rankin (John Rebus), Elizabeth George (Tommy Lynley), Mark Billingham (Tom Thorne),
and Graham Hurley (Joe Faraday), among others, all of whose main characters are
DIs.
I also enjoy Stuart MacBride’s gritty series set in Glasgow,
which has as its lead Detective Sergeant Logan McRae. MacBride and Slater are
consistent in their presentation of the lot of the Detective Sergeant; like McRae,
DS Peter Gayle is charged with the practical, day-to-day tasks of the
investigation, reporting back to a DI who is likely occupied with more than one
case. The DS works at the coal face: dealing with leads, interviewing witnesses,
trudging through fields. He is focused on the procedure, the proven steps that
generate results. As a result, Nowhere to
Run gives you the dogsbody view of the investigation, and you get the puzzle
pieces the same way as Gayle and his team.
In the opening of the novel, DS Gayle is returning to work
after an enforced absence due to the disappearance of his son Tommy. He pushes
to have the case of a newly missing child, Rosie Whitlock, assigned to his team,
which creates some tension between Gayle and his wife Louise, and causes his
team to be concerned that he is emotionally unstable when it comes to his
perspective in the Whitlock case.
Slater handles the emotional aspects of Gayle’s struggle
reasonably well. He is a man torn by guilt over the disappearance of his son
and is desperate to save Rosie, and the anguish he feels through the ebbs and
flows of the case is nicely presented. Gayle throws himself into the case, not
only to find the girl but perhaps to also escape his home life, as his wife has
become more withdrawn and hostile towards him. Gayle’s excessive time at work
does not help the situation.
But not just this case would keep Gayle at the office. He is
a dedicated, tenacious detective who hungers for a just outcome. At the same
time, he loves his family and is dedicated to them, even if he is only beginning
to realise how much he does and what that might mean for how he works in the
future.
As with many police procedurals, the investigation expands
as the team digs deeper into the lives of the victim and suspects. Other girls
have gone missing, and a body has been discovered. As days pass, Gayle becomes
more determined to find Rosie, and more concerned that they will find her dead.
Slater does a good job of managing the tension, and you begin to believe time
is running out as well.
Characterisation is critical in a procedural, in my view.
You have to care about the people in the story, or at least understand them and
find them interesting. When the main character is a Detective Inspector, you
typically have a DS as the main supporting character and a DCI as either a
supportive boss or a foil to the DI. With a DS in the lead, your supporting
cast can either be superiors or subordinates. Unlike the various senior
officers in DS Logan McRae’s life, those in Gayle’s are much less conspicuous. DI
Colin Underhill and Detective Chief Inspector Adam Silverstone are mere background
characters, with the DCI something of a cliché, the press-hungry and ambitious
young rising star who most often gets in the way of good police work.
Slater does a much better job of fleshing out Gayle’s teams
of three Detective Constables – Dave Miles, Dick Feeney, and Jane Bennett – plus
Police Constables Ben Myers and Jill Evans. While Gayle is clearly the central
character, his team are key supporting players whose personalities are generally
well rounded out as they help keep the plot moving. They care about Gayle, and
you care about them.
Nowhere to Run is
a solid debut crime novel, that gives us a character to watch in DS Peter
Gayle. There are some things to quibble about, but there is much more to enjoy, and I am glad this is the first in a series.
Verdict: Recommended
Nowhere to Run is published by HQ, an imprint of HarperCollins Publishers.
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