The eleven Charlie Resnick novels to date have established John Harvey in the upper echelons of British crime writers: a place he has further cemented with his three Frank Elder books.
However, `Far Cry' is the second to feature his latest creations, DI Will Grayson and DS Helen Walker - following 2007's `Gone to Ground' - to my mind the most disappointing crime novel JH has ever written.
This second outing tackles the emotive issues of child abduction and abuse. It's 1995 and Simon and Ruth Pierce find their daughter Heather has gone missing on the foggy moors of Cornwall. She's found dead but an open verdict is recorded. Cordon, the investigating officer, harbours a suspicion that there are darker elements at play, but is unable to prove anything.
Fast forward to date and Ruth is now married to her second husband Andrew, when their daughter Beatrice disappears, apparently abducted.
To paraphrase Oscar Wilde: to lose one daughter seems a tragedy, to lose two, looks like carelessness. At the same time, a child abuser has recently been released from jail, and DI Grayson has him under surveillance, believing he's committed far more than the one crime he was sent down for. Ruth's first husband Simon, has also re-entered her life, and he's still disturbed/obsessed over the original incident involving his daughter Heather's death.
John ties everything up well, the characterisation is good, and he's believable (up to a point) at presenting the anguish and torment that the parents of abducted children go through. But - and it's a big but - he's no better than good here, when he needs to be great.
Although the prose is clean and spare, it lacks the compressed precision of his best writing and at 500 hardback pages long this feels slightly bloated. It's a decent, solid story, but time was when JH would have achieved the same effects in 200 pages less. My other quibble is there're no real suprises in here - it's fairly obvious what will happen at each stage.
Having said that, I can quite easily see this reaching a much wider readership than the Resnick books purely because of its subject matter. I acknowledge that it's a big improvement on `Gone to Ground', but it's not as good as 'Cold at Hand' last year's Resnick novel. As a long-term fan, I don't believe this is JH writing at the top of his game, but it still stands up against 75% of British crime fiction and shouldn't disappoint too many of his readership.