THE ITALIAN GIRL by Patricia Hall is extremely well written and kept me fully engaged during the 5-6 hours I spent reading it this rainy Sunday afternoon. GIRL is precisely the sort of mystery I like--not too bloody! Well, more than one corpse surfaces, but the novel contains no gratuitous violence and Hall's character development and plot are excellent.
DCI Michael Thackeray, one of the main characters, is a recovering alcoholic with a sad secret he finally decides to share at the end of the story. His companion Laura Ackroyd, a feature news reporter for a local York paper is a red-headed, zealous, and at times dangerously impulsive young woman, but extremely likeable nevertheless. Laura's charming grandmother Joyce is a fiesty 80-year old who was probably just as reckless in her youth. Heck she's daring in her eighties!! Joyce's life-long causes--decent housing for the less well off, affordable and adequate health care, and safe and well-run nursing facilities are important if not trendy at the moment. If Margaret Thatcher and Ronald Reagan are your role-models, you won't like Joyce!!
GIRL begins with the search for the identity of a skelton excavated at the site of a new housing project. The remains are quickly identified in spite of having been buried six feet under for nearly fifty years, largely owing to the presence of a gold cross found with the corpse (and featured on the book jacket). The remainder of the story involves a search for the killer. The murderer is some one she knew. I did not realize who it was until almost the end of the book because there are several possibilities, and Hall does a good job of laying out the clues and red herrings.
The little gold cross on the front cover is a symbol of many things including some rather interesting insights Hall shares through her characters about Roman Catholocism. As a former RC, I really appreciated her insights, but if you're terribly orthodox, you may not.
One reviewer quoted on the book jacket says Hall's writing is comparable to that of Elizabeth George, but I don't think so for several reasons. George writes extremely long books with a great deal of redundancy. Her plots are hysterical, and at times her characters behave in unbelivable ways. And, George's detectives are aristocrats. Hall's main characters are not aristocrts (think democrat, think liberal, think labor) but ordinary and mostly believeable people, Hall's writing is succinct and realistic. I will definitely read more of Hall's books.