The Prologue opens in Spring 1980. Several friends are attending the high school graduation of Bobby Ransome, a young man who was graduating several years late due to problems in his earlier years. The second part of the prologue takes place ten years later, in the summer of 1990, when Bobby has returned from several years in prison for dealing drugs. Bobby joins his ex-wife, Wanda, and her family for dinner, much to the dismay of her current husband, Warren. Bobby's return has caused some excitement and some dismay around the small town of Sechelt.
A few weeks later, Royal Canadian Mounted Police Sergeant Karl Alberg is out sailing with his lover Cassandra when they see the body of a man on the beach. It turns out that he had fallen from a cliff above. The dead man was Steven Grayson, who grew up in Sechelt but has been living in Vancouver for the last ten years.
The story is told from multiple perspectives (Karl Alberg's, Cassandra's, the various members of the community that are affected by the death and by Bobby's return). At the same time that Cassandra and Karl are continuing to figure out their relationship, one of Karl's daughters is visiting for the summer and working part-time for the local newspaper. And Karl is dealing with the fact that his ex-wife is getting married again.
My thoughts:
As usual, the characters in this story are very well-drawn. This is the fourth book in the Karl Alberg series and I have found most of the books to be more of a character study than a mystery. And I like them that way.
The setting and the atmosphere are lovely. Sechelt is a real-life seaside community on the Sunshine Coast of British Columbia, northwest of Vancouver. As described below...
On the Sunshine Coast that year, summertime was long and hot and dusty, and the world smelled of raspberries and roses.
For weeks the sky remained utterly clear, and the air was hot and still.
The waters that lapped at the western shoreline were such a deep blue they looked as if they might stain the skin. The nearer islands near the Strait of Georgia were etched fine and clear, every tree and every rock sharp-edged; the islands somewhat farther away were soft dark shapes against the sky; the most distant islands were purple shadows in the far-reaching sea.
I continue to enjoy this series and I am surprised each time at the themes the author covers and the different approaches she takes to each novel.
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Publisher: Felony & Mayhem, 2010. Orig. pub. 1991.
Length: 275 pages
Format: Trade paperback
Series: Karl Alberg #4
Setting: Sunshine Coast in British Columbia, Canada
Genre: Mystery, Police Procedural
12 comments:
Tracy, I've always enjoyed Wright's novels but I don't think I've read one for thirty years. Silly me.
This really is a well-written series, isn't it, Tracy? I do like the Karl Alberg character, and you're right that there are several themes covered in the books. I haven't read much of Wright lately; I should get back to her work.
I'm not familiar with this series, or even this author. I might have to do some research.
Jerry, I am not reading the series as regularly as I should be. It has been six years since I read #3 in the series. I hope I can read the following books at a better pace than that.
Margot, L.R. Wright is one of my favorite Canadian authors (although there are a good number of them). I also like Eric Wright (who was writing at about the same time) and of course Gail Bowen. I could go on and on.
Kelly, This author is not all that well-known, but her first book in this series, The Suspect, won the Edgar Award for Best Novel. It is very good, if you don't mind inverted mysteries, where you know who the killer is from the beginning. The series has been adapted for a TV series on Hulu, and the publisher Felony & Mayhem has reissued the full series recently, so possibly they will become more popular.
Hi Tracy, very nice review and I am interested. I like the plot and Bobby's return after 10 years. I have a number of series going but I will check out L R Wright as well.
Thanks, Kathy. I have way too many series started too, and this one I started 13 years ago. I think I have finished less series since I started blogging.
I like the sound of this series. I think I need to check it out. Hopefully my library has the first one. :D
I hope your library has the first one, Lark. It is the best place to start and it is a very good mystery. I love the setting.
Sounds good. My husband & I have been to Sechelt -- we rode bicycles through there years ago. The Sunshine Coast is interesting and a bit remote ... I'd like to go back. I'm wondering if Bobby is implicated in the latest murder in the book. I hope Alberg can figure it out.
Susan, I am so envious, I would love to see Sechelt or any part of the Sunshine Coast. This was a difficult case for Alberg to solve; but as usual it was the characters that were the most interesting.
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