Product Details
Blind to the Bones

Blind to the Bones
By Stephen Booth

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Product Description

A death in the family-from-hell bring Detectives Fry and Cooper to a remote and unfriendly rural community in their fourth psychological thriller. 'And as it grew dark, Withens became almost entirely silent. Except for the screaming.' A small village in the Peak District, Withens is troubled by theft and vandalism, mostly generated by local family-from-hell, the Oxleys. Now it is the focus of a murder investigation -- a man's body has been found on the bleak moors nearby, and the man is an Oxley. To crack the case, DC Ben Cooper must break open the delinquent clan. His boss, DS Diane Fry, is also in Withens. Grim new evidence has turned up in the case of a missing student but her parents refuse to believe she could be dead. The darkness in Withens's heart is growing. And things are only going to get nastier!


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #38781 in Books
  • Published on: 2004-03-22
  • Original language: English
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 640 pages

Editorial Reviews

Review
Praise for Blind to the Bones: 'He has got better with each book. This is another very fine book, masterfully plotted and filled with real flesh-and-blood personalities' Daily Telegraph 'Another of Booth's fine Derbyshire mysteries' Scotsman Praise for Stephen Booth: 'Stephen Booth creates a fine sense of place and atmosphere ! the unguessable solution to the crime comes as a real surprise' Sunday Telegraph 'The complex relationship between [Cooper and Fry] is excellently drawn, and is combined with an intriguing plot and a real sense of place: Stephen Booth is an author to keep an eye on' Evening Standard 'Stephen Booth makes high summer in Derbyshire as dark and terrifying as midwinter' Val McDermid 'A dark star may be born!' Reginald Hill 'A leading light of British crime writing' Maxim Jakubowski, Guardian

Val McDermid
‘Stephen Booth makes high summer in Derbyshire as dark and terrifying as midwinter’

Reginald Hill
‘A dark star may be born!’


Customer Reviews

Small Town Mysteries5
Murder once again visits the Peak District of Derbyshire near Edendale in the 4th book of this terrific series. The members of the Derbyshire Constabulary, E Division are called on to work the case, although Ben Cooper has been loaned out to the Rural Crimes Team and Diane Fry is investigating a 2-year-old missing persons case, separating the duelling coppers.

The story centres around the tiny hamlet of Withens leading both Cooper and Fry there on their separate investigations. The murder victim is a young local man named Neil Granger. Granger is part of a large family that makes up the majority of the residents of Withens. It’s Ben’s job to interview the residents but like so many isolated close-knit communities they are particularly suspicious of outsiders, and this lot are especially suspicious when it comes to the police. Ben can’t help but think they are hiding something but doesn’t know what.

Meanwhile, there is one old couple in Withens, the Renshaws, who are more than happy to talk. The problem is, the only topic of conversation is their daughter Emma, who went missing 2 years ago. The Renshaws talk of Emma in the present tense, expecting her to walk through their door at any moment, much to Diane Fry’s bemusement.

Because of Ben Cooper’s secondment to the Rural Crimes Team, Diane has had to use the ever hungry and source of numerous lighter moments, Gavin Murfin. Murfin is taking an increasingly prominent role as the series progresses and is a nice counterpoint to Fry’s more dour by the book attitude.

This series is getting stronger and stronger with each new book and the characters of Ben Cooper and Diane Fry are developing nicely. If you’re after an exceedingly enjoyable police procedural, I strongly recommend this one. In my opinion, this is the best of the series so far.

Booth's best yet5
This, Stephen Booth's fourth novel featuring DC Cooper and DS Fry, is an excellent continuation to the series, and arguably his best novel yet. Set as always in the Peak District, this novel has all the classic elements - dead bodies, a struggling police force and unhelpful witnesses. However, Blind to the Bones is much more than a typical murder mystery. Once again, the antagonism between Cooper and Fry, mixed up with a grudging mutual respect, boils away just below the surface. As with Booth's earlier novels, the reader feels close to these characters, due to the excellent descriptions of their emotions and thought processes. This time, it is DS Fry's personal life that we become more involved in, unlike Blood on the Tongue, where Cooper's was at the forefront. In developing the plot, Booth lifts this novel onto a higher level, providing a fascinating insight into the life of a close-knit family, and an isolated and deprived community. Booth's research is exemplary, and the significance of a particular local custom to the plot is a masterful touch. The landscape of the Peak District and the location of this novel are especially important, as in all of Booth's novels, and the added historical element to the story adds to the unusual community at the centre of the plot.

Several seemingly disparate elements are woven together and ingeniously combined, producing a most satisfying conclusion to the book, following a series of unexpected twists. The contrast between the different social groups within the village is superbly handled - though they make attempts to distance themselves from each other, there are of course connections between them, which are slowly unravelled throughout this novel, making the plot all the more intriguing. As ever, there's some light humour, courtesy of DC Murfin, and his appetite, which infuriates DS Fry.

This is a truly splendid piece of writing - read it! I can't wait for the next instalment.

excellent5
Two years ago, student Emma Renshaw disappeared while on her way home from university. Now, a new discovery in the remote countryside prompts the police to reinvestigate the case. But, Diane Fry, in charge of the investigation, finds herself with a hard task made even worse by Emma's parents, who are still expecting their daughter to be found.

They have been pestering the police and her friends ever since her disappearance, note the time of every phone-call just in case it is Emma, keep her car ready and waiting in the garage, and retain all of her Christmas presents in her bedroom - not touched since she left - upstairs.

Eventually, Diane's search leads her to the dark, isolated village of Withens, where she runs into Ben Cooper, who has been temporarily seconded to the Rural Crime Squad, and is investigating both a series of burglaries and a vicious murder. A young man has been battered and left for dead up on the moors, left for the crows to find, and Ben finds nothing but a wall of silence.

The man is a relative of the Oxleys, the oldest family in the area, descended from the very first men who buried under the moors to build the railways tunnels for 3 miles under the moors. But the Oxleys are a secretive family, protective of their own, and they refuse to talk to Ben, an outsider. Thus, progress on the investigation is almost nil. And, to compound Ben's problems, Diane Fry's sister, who ran off when they were teenagers, turns up out of the blue, seeking his help. She wants him to convince Diane to stop looking for, to forget her private investigations and leave things be. With the two officers' relationship tense and fragile at best, this is a shift in the dynamic which could easily destroy it altogether.

Stephen Booth has, within the space of only four novels, safely joined the impressive ranks of Reginald Hill and Peter Robinson as England's most accomplished northern crime novelists. This series, set mostly on and around the remote moors of Derbyshire, has everything. The plots are cracking and clever, paced and patterned masterfully, and the writing is very good indeed, but the most powerful feature of the series is Booth's atmospheric evocation of place, which is dark and brooding and brilliant.

The moors become terrifying, ominous and eerie, yet they also retain a dark beauty which draws the reader right in. And that ability to create atmosphere is displayed more strongly than ever in this fourth book, and all throughout the book he comes up with some excellent reflections of the gradual decay of the moors. The village of Withens, shrinking and dying; the forgotten churchyard, overgrown and tangled with weeds; the long-established family slowly finding themselves rent asunder.

Booth also has a great aptitude for character. His minor characters are as fascinating and well-developed as his two leads, who themselves possibly make up the most interesting duo on the scene in crime fiction. The relationship between Cooper and Fry is complex and compelling, its shifts and undercurrents have a way of making the reader slightly nervous.

The tension between the two is palpable, and the obviousness of the fact that they do care about one another, on various levels, often has the reader imploring them to take a step back and just listen to one another properly just for a change. To be honest, I doubt there is another relationship with as great a dynamic and level of interest in all the crime genre. The series is worth reading just for the shifts and changes and subtle nuances in the pair's attitude toward one another.

Stephen Booth has won the Barry award for Best British novel two years running, and, with the fact that Blind to the Bones is the strongest novel yet in this powerful series, I wouldn't be at all surprised if he snatches it for a well-deserved third time.