Billed as the final instalment of the DCI Craig Gillard series I read this book with some trepidation. I’ve really enjoyed this series and didn’t really want it to end but Nick Louth has dealt with the ending brilliantly.
The frustrations of being a Police Officer and maintaining a personal life is depicted really well
As the SIO of some very high profile investigations Gillard has always put his family slightly behind his job whilst always being a loving and caring husband.
Now it’s different. Sam, Gillard’s wife is heavily pregnant, and even though he has been given reassurances that he can have leave to support her through the birth Gillard is called in again, and again.
The end of the series? I’m still not 100% sure we’ve heard the end of Gillard and his team. There is scope to have some of the characters move forward in their own series. But by the end of the book I was thinking how Gillard should really be left alone to enjoy faintly time as best as he can.
Publishers Gumpth
The final instalment of the DCI Gillard Crime Thrillers,
Another impossible case for DCI Gillard, but this time the answers are very close to home…
With a baby on the way, a pregnant wife to take care of and a new home to settle into, DCI Craig Gillard seems to have found a life of domestic bliss.
But when retired police sergeant Ken Stapleford is found stabbed to death in front of his own TV while watching Saturday afternoon football, Gillard’s peace is once again disturbed.
Only a day later, just a short walk from his new home, Gillard is himself witness to the killing of a jogger in Nightingale Park. A strange forensic connection emerges between the two killings, something that seems impossible. As he digs into the evidence, Gillard uncovers two more attacks, and any chance of taking time off for the birth of his child disappears.
And all the time the killer is circling closer and closer…
Perfect for fans of Stuart Macbride, Mark Billingham and Robert Bryndza.
What I thought
As always Nick Louth has written a brilliant Police Procedural Crime Thriller.
The crimes in this series have all been original, well conceived, and realistic, and this one is no exception.
Effectively Gillard is investigations two unrelated crimes, a series of rapes carried out in a park near his house, and a prominent influencer killed in the same park.
But the connections between these crimes soon become obvious, as does a more tenuous thread to the murder of a retired Police Officer being investigated by one of Gillard’s colleagues.
As more crimes get linked it looks almost impossible for one person to have carried out the attacks, over such a vast area, in such a relatively short time.
Gillard’s thinking, and the logic in which he applies his thoughts are really well written and just like the rest of the series I was hooked before the end of the first chapter.
As I said earlier I can see spin offs from this series.
Whatever Nick Louth decides, I’ll be at the front of the queue for his next book.
Pages: 323. Publisher: Canelo Crime. Publishing date: 17 August 2023

