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The Darkest Place

von Jo Spain

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From the bestselling author of With Our Blessing and The Confession comes a gripping and chilling new mystery 'Horrifyingly dark . . . a deeply satisfying read' - Sunday Times Christmas day, and DCI Tom Reynolds receives an alarming call. A mass grave has been discovered on Oileán na Caillte, the island which housed the controversial psychiatric institution St. Christina's. The hospital has been closed for decades and onsite graves were tragically common. Reynolds thinks his adversarial boss is handing him a cold case to sideline him. But then it transpires another body has been discovered amongst the dead - one of the doctors who went missing from the hospital in mysterious circumstances forty years ago. He appears to have been brutally murdered. As events take a sudden turn, nothing can prepare Reynolds and his team for what they are about to discover once they arrive on the island . . . 'Deft plotting and expert handling of tension make for an intelligent mystery' - The Guardian… (mehr)
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This was a bit of a mess (I'm still not entirely clear of the timeline for the various events in Howe's life) and unpleasant with it. We had the unoriginal premise of a spooky island, often cut off from the mainland for days at a time due to the weather, plus a cast of interchangeable medical suspects we didn't get to know sufficiently for me to keep straight in my mind. The inhumane treatment that had been meted out to patients at an asylum there over decades was described in more detail than I needed.

However, we were supposed to believe that after the asylum was shut down some of the doctors and nurses, the pharmacist, and even some of the patients had opted to stay on...? It got less and less believable as the story went on, and the ending was both utterly unbelievable and reliant on a forensic scientist having made an error they surely couldn't have made - it was as if the author had boxed herself into a corner and chose this as the easy way out.

I have enjoyed the previous three instalments, but this one wasn't for me. ( )
  pgchuis | Mar 10, 2020 |
The mass grave on the island off the coast of County Kerry accommodates 60 bodies going back decades, The site is to be cleared for a new hotel complex but work stops so that the bodies can be lifted and re-located. All of the bodies have been put into body bags and tagged with names etc. But one does not belong. It has been wrapped in plastic and hidden under the top layer in the mass grave. And it has probably been there for 40 years when a promising young doctor disappeared.

That he is called about the case on Christmas Day and expected to go to the site almost immediately is a measure of the malevolence that DCI Reynolds' Superintendent has for him, and typical of how he has been treated for the past 6 months.

There is pressure from the Chief Commissioner for this cold case to be treated with priority because of familial links with the wife of the missing man. The wife gives Reynolds a diary she thinks the missing man left at home when he was last there forty years ago. For forty years she has held on to the hope that he will turn up. It makes for horrific reading.

There is some interesting discussion of how treatments of insanity and depression have changed over the last 40 years - provided by a clinical psychiatrist that Reynolds takes as part of his small team.

A very engrossing read.

This is the first novel that I have read by this author and I didn't feel my reading was at all impaired by not knowing the content of the previous three titles in the series. Although there were some references to earlier cases. ( )
  smik | Jan 28, 2019 |
I loved Jo Spain’s The Confession and was looking forward to reading this, but it hasn’t moved me in the same way.

The Darkest Place is the fourth in the police procedural series featuring DCI Tom Reynolds. As he is celebrating Christmas he is called on by his much-despised senior officer to investigate a cold case. A doctor went missing from a psychiatric hospital on a remote island off the Irish coast 40 years ago. His wife never gave up hope but now a body has been found.

Tom and his colleagues hotfoot it to the island where they discover a sinister setting and a lot of moody silence from the few remaining island dwellers, most of whom worked at the hospital until its closure some years earlier. He is also armed with a diary which the doctor’s wife found among her husband’s possessions.

It’s a great premise, and, like The Confession, should provide a gateway to explore an important element of recent Irish history – in this case the mass incarceration of people who deviated from social norms in ways which had nothing to do with mental health. However it never really comes to life for me.

There are no flashbacks giving us the story of the asylum so everything we know comes from either the witnesses (who are reluctant to talk, for a variety of reasons) and the diary. We get glimpses of the cruelty of the regime, and of some of the people locked up unjustly (pregnant girls, homosexuals and one man apparently incarcerated just because he was in a financial dispute with a powerful landowner). However the diary is written in a fairly clinical, prosaic style which didn’t bring the characters to life. It also (conveniently) documents everything except the name of the perpetrator!

The police characters felt a little bland to me after the pleasingly abrasive cast of The Confession. Tom is a steady, nice guy, a family man who loves to be around his granddaughter, while his junior officers are hardworking but, apart from learning that two of them are in a relationship, they had no distinguishing features for me. Perhaps this makes them – that dreaded word – relatable, but they left me cold. It may be that, some way into the series, the author has glossed over characterisation, because the characters are so familiar to her she doesn’t think she needs to explain them again.

As well as the couple in a relationship, there are two colleagues of Tom’s who are estranged and with a complicated backstory. Tom is quite happy to jump in with comments on both relationships, making the whole thing feel like they are still in high school.

Personally, I would have liked more on the conflicting beliefs and values of the hospital staff. Were the practices there undertaken by people who were sincere but misguided or just cruel? What was the motivation of those who went along with them? Having worked in institutional settings, I know how groupthink takes hold. In a remote and economically deprived area, the pressure would have been even greater. Was the hospital an anomaly or part of a structure that was maintained with the support of church and state? All this is hinted at but not fully explored.

The setting on the island is atmospheric. Things go bump in the night, the islanders all have strange secrets, there is a clever twist at the end. But I didn’t feel immersed in the story or that I’d rush to read another in this series.
*
I received a copy of The Darkest Place from the publisher via Netgalley.
Read more of my reviews on my blog at katevane.com ( )
  KateVane | Sep 26, 2018 |
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From the bestselling author of With Our Blessing and The Confession comes a gripping and chilling new mystery 'Horrifyingly dark . . . a deeply satisfying read' - Sunday Times Christmas day, and DCI Tom Reynolds receives an alarming call. A mass grave has been discovered on Oileán na Caillte, the island which housed the controversial psychiatric institution St. Christina's. The hospital has been closed for decades and onsite graves were tragically common. Reynolds thinks his adversarial boss is handing him a cold case to sideline him. But then it transpires another body has been discovered amongst the dead - one of the doctors who went missing from the hospital in mysterious circumstances forty years ago. He appears to have been brutally murdered. As events take a sudden turn, nothing can prepare Reynolds and his team for what they are about to discover once they arrive on the island . . . 'Deft plotting and expert handling of tension make for an intelligent mystery' - The Guardian

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