#BookReview Down a Dark River (Inspector Corravan #1) by Karen Odden @crookedlanebks @karen_odden

Down A Dark RiverAbout the Book

London, 1878. One April morning, a small boat bearing a young woman’s corpse floats down the murky waters of the Thames. When the victim is identified as Rose Albert, daughter of a prominent judge, the Scotland Yard director gives the case to Michael Corravan, one of the only Senior Inspectors remaining after a corruption scandal the previous autumn left the division in ruins. Reluctantly, Corravan abandons his ongoing case, a search for the missing wife of a shipping magnate, handing it over to his young colleague, Mr. Stiles.

An Irish former bare-knuckles boxer and dockworker from London’s seedy East End, Corravan has good street sense and an inspector’s knack for digging up clues. But he’s confounded when, a week later, a second woman is found dead in a rowboat, and then a third. The dead women seem to have no connection whatsoever. Meanwhile, Mr. Stiles makes an alarming discovery: the shipping magnate’s missing wife, Mrs. Beckford, may not have fled her house because she was insane, as her husband claims, and Mr. Beckford may not be the successful man of business that he appears to be.

Slowly, it becomes clear that the river murders and the case of Mrs. Beckford may be linked through some terrible act of injustice in the past—for which someone has vowed a brutal vengeance. Now, with the newspapers once again trumpeting the Yard’s failures, Corravan must dredge up the truth—before London devolves into a state of panic and before the killer claims another innocent victim.

Format: ebook (336 pages)                   Publisher: Crooked Lane
Publication date: 9th November 2021 Genre: Historical Fiction, Crime, Mystery

Find Down a Dark River (Inspector Corravan #1) on Goodreads

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Amazon UK
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My Review

As regular followers of my blog will know, I love a good historical crime mystery; even better if it’s part of a series. (You can find some of my favourites here.) Unfortunately, I seem to make a habit of discovering series that have been going for some time – Sarah Hawkswood’s Bradecote and Catchpoll series, I’m looking at you – so I’m delighted to be in at the beginning of what looks like a terrific new series.

In Michael (Mickey) Corravan Karen Odden has created an attractively multi-faceted character. He has a strong sense of justice, is handy in a fight (thanks to his earlier experiences as a prize-fighter) and has worked his way up from humble beginnings to the rank of Senior Inspector at Scotland Yard, even if he sometimes feels he doesn’t fit in. ‘The Yard was changing.  The whole bloody world was changing. But I wasn’t sure I had it in me to be different than I was.‘ He has some inner demons too, which to my mind only adds to his attractiveness as a character. At one point the behaviour of another character leads him to reflect, ‘There was something about her desperation that edged too close to memories that I’d rather let lie‘. I”ll admit to developing a bit of a crush on Corravan although I’m conscious that will bring me a formidable opponent in the person of Mrs Belinda Gale. A successful novelist and playwright, she’s Corravan’s Thursday night paramour but also the person who knows him best, even if he occasionally finds her perceptive scrutiny uncomfortable. ‘I loved Belinda – of course I did. But she liked to haul thoughts and feelings out into the light to examine them, and sometimes mine were wily and furtive and wanted to be left alone in the dark.’

In the book, the Thames is not just means of transport or trade but a metaphor for all that’s murky and malevolent in London society. As Corravan observes of the Thames, ‘I say it’s mostly a cesspool, a receptacle for the entire city’s detritus, complete with entrails and rotting corpses..it’s easy to imagine the Thames as a live serpent, filthy and slithering at my back‘. Definitely a dark river then. And it’s not only the river that is dark. The book features some particularly unpleasant (male) characters whose sense of entitlement makes them believe they are above the law and free to abuse others with impunity. Bribes, favours and convenient looks the other way are their currency. Remind you of anything?

The skilfully crafted plot has plenty of twists and turns with events described in such a way that I felt as if I was looking over Corravan’s shoulder as he tries to puzzle things out. Not for nothing is he described as ‘like a dog with a bone’. I also loved the cast of secondary characters, such as Corravan’s diligent colleague, Stiles, his wise doctor friend, James, and young Harry who Corravan is persuaded to take under his wing and whose eclectic knowledge proves more useful than he might have imagined.

I thought Down A Dark River was terrific and I want to thank Karen for offering me a review copy and for introducing me to Corravan. I sincerely hope this will be the first of many more cases for him. If you’re a fan of historical crime mysteries, I can heartily recommend Down A Dark River.

In three words: Atmospheric, ingenious, suspenseful

Try something similar: Death Makes No Distinction by Lucienne Boyce

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Karen OddenAbout the Author

Karen received her Ph.D. in English literature from New York University and subsequently taught at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee. Her first novel, A Lady in the Smoke, was a USA Today bestseller and A Dangerous Duet and A Trace of Deceit have won awards for historical mystery and historical fiction. Her fourth mystery, Down a Dark River, will be available November 9, 2021. (Bio: Goodreads/Photo: Author website)

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#BookReview The Vanishing Half by Brit Bennett

The Vanishing HalfAbout the Book

Stella and Desiree are identical twins, growing up together in a small, Southern black community. Until, at age sixteen, they run away…

Years later, everything about their lives is different: their families, communities and racial identities. One sister lives with her black daughter in the same Southern town she once tried to escape. The other secretly passes for white, and her husband knows nothing of her past. Still, separated by many miles and just as many lies, the fates of the twins remain intertwined. What will happen in the next generation, when their own daughters’ storylines intersect?

Format: Paperback (366 pages)    Publisher: Dialogue Books
Publication date: 17th June 2021 Genre: Historical Fiction

Find The Vanishing Half on Goodreads

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Bookshop.org
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Hive | Amazon UK
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My Review

Firstly, I have to thank Waterstones in Reading for choosing The Vanishing Half for their October book club and for finally making me pluck from it from my TBR pile!

Mallard, where the Vignes twins grow up, is described as ‘a strange town’. Isn’t it just? A town that doesn’t appear on any maps and where over the decades black people have attempted to become light-skinned, such that they can almost pass as white. I found Mallard an unsettling place with a rather dystopian feel about it.

Although I felt sorry for the traumatic events Desiree experiences, for me Stella’s story was the more compelling. Initially, her decision to pass as white seems to involve little more than bravado. ‘There was nothing to being white expect boldness. You could convince anyone you belonged somewhere if you acted like you did.’  However, as time goes by, it involves her telling more and more lies, to the point where she constantly fears being caught out and cannot face revealing the truth to anyone, including her husband and daughter, Kennedy.  It’s the lies more than anything else that eventually threaten her relationship with Kennedy.

My favourite character was Deisree’s daughter, Jude. I really felt for her growing up with dark skin in a town where this is the exception and the terrible racist abuse she experiences from schoolmates and others. ‘People thought that being one of a kind made you special. No, it just made you lonely.’ I was pleased when, later in the book, she forms a relationship that encompasses real tenderness and affection. I also loved Early, whose occupation involves tracking people down but who decides there are more important things than completing a commission. The care he shows for Desiree’s mother towards the end of the book was also really touching.

The book explores many themes, such as loneliness, poverty and discrimination. Common amongst many of the characters is that they have experienced being abandoned as children. However, I felt the overriding theme was identity.  Stella is the obvious example, reinventing herself as white whilst knowing that underneath she is black. ‘She’d always known that it was possible to be two different people in one lifetime, or maybe it was only possible for some. Maybe others were just stuck with who they were.’  There are other examples as well, such as Reese who chooses another identity from the one he was born with, Kennedy who is happiest when she is on a stage or film set and becoming another person, even Mallard itself in the end.

Not only is The Vanishing Half an enthralling story populated with skilfully drawn characters, but it offers many layers to unpick making it the perfect book club choice.

In three words: Powerful, thought-provoking, emotional

Try something similar: Passing by Nella Larsen (recently adapted for cinema)

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Brit BennettAbout the Author

Brit Bennett is the author of the New York Times bestselling novel The Mothers; a finalist for the National Book Critics Circle John Leonard Prize for the best first book, the PEN/Robert W. Bingham Prize for Debut Fiction and the New York Public Library Young Lions Fiction Award; and a National Book Foundation 5 under 35. Her work has been featured in the New Yorker, New York Times Magazine, Paris Review and Jezebel.

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