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Hardcover Darkness & Light Book

ISBN: 0151011338

ISBN13: 9780151011339

Darkness & Light

(Book #3 in the Frank Elder Series)

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Format: Hardcover

Condition: Very Good

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Book Overview

Former cop Frank Elder is drawn out of retirement when his ex-wife asks him to look into the disappearance of her friend Jennie's sister Claire in Nottingham. Elder reluctantly returns to the city... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Excellent Crime Fiction

John Harvey is best known for his excellent Nottingham-based Charlie Resnick novels. He is also a poet, dramatist and broadcaster. After living in Nottingham for a good number of years, he has now returned to London to live with his partner and their young daughter. Retired Detective Inspector Frank Elder is awakened from his sleepy existence in Cornwall by a telephone call. It is from his estranged wife and she is after a favour. Claire Meecham, the sister of an old friend has gone missing. Claire is a widow in her fifties and no one can thing of any earthly reason why she should have disappeared. Elder's wife think that he will have the contacts and the know how to track Claire down. Frank agrees to return to his old stomping ground of Nottingham and make a search, but then Claire is found dead. The way her body has been laid out, almost reverently by the killer reminds Elder of a previous dead woman, laid out in almost the same way. It was his first case with the Serious Crimes department, a case that was never solved . . .

DARKNESS AND LIGHT

JOHN HARVEY IS AN ELEGANT WRITER. DARKNESS AND LIGHT LOOKS BAD ON THE COVER BUT INSIDE IT'S FANTASTIC. HE MATCHES IAN RANKIN.

HARVEY IS A MASTER WORDSMITH

Many of us have admired 16th century Flemish tapestries now on display in museums throughout the world. They're so beautiful - from a distance they almost appear to be a painting but upon stepping closer we can see the millions of stitches. While it may seem unusual, John Harvey's latest book, Darkness & Light, reminds me of a tapestry, neatly stitched or plotted with each thread or word a vital part. To carry the analogy further, Harvey's colors are telling - the dark hue of an expression, the revealing shade of a glance. With nary an extraneous word he creates a story so compelling that rather than finding out who the killer is one wishes this tale would never end. Harvey is, indeed, a master wordsmith. Without prelude our story opens in the office of child psychiatrist Alice Silverman. She is interviewing a boy of eleven or so who refuses to speak, yet she notes that there is "something confrontational beating just beneath the skin....." Quickly the scene changes to Cornwall where Frank Elder has retired. He receives a telephone call from his former wife, Joanne, who asks him to look into the disappearance of the older sister of her good friend, Jennie. Initially reluctant, Elder decides to go to the city in hopes of seeing his daughter, Katharine. The missing woman is Claire Meecham, a widowed woman of middle age. According to Jennie her sister is a bit of a recluse, a shy retiring lady who wouldn't just go off without leaving word. However, as Elder begins to delve into Claire's life he finds a woman quite different from the one her sister has described. Eventually Claire is found - she is at home, quite dead. She's discovered in her bed, fully clothed, hair neat, and not a mark on her. The sight of her reminds Elder of another case, an old unsolved death. He teams with a former colleague, Maureen Prior in an effort to solve both puzzles. His investigation is related in chapters alternating with the story of the young boy being treated by Alice Silverman. When the child is moved to another city, she is dismayed and readers are left to wonder. But, leave it to the brilliant John Harvey to weave the threads of his story together in a surprising yet satisfactory manner. This author startles with suspense, and his characters are limned with such sensitivity that one feels empathy for both villain and victim. He is simply the best- don't miss it! - Gail Cooke

A stylish read

A John Harvey book is a joy to read with his flowing, easy to read sentences and in the way that he sets up scenes, so clearly, with the minimum of fuss. Retired policeman, Frank Elder is lured from his retirement in Cornwall by a plea from his ex wife Joanna, whose friend is worried by the disappearance of her sister Claire, a normally quiet, reliable widow. Frank agrees to help and, while looking through Claire's house, discovers hints that Claire isn't the complete mouse that everyone thinks her. When Claire's body reappears in her house, dead by strangulation for several days and laid out as though by an undertaker, Frank enlists the help of his old workmate, DI Maureen Prior and is taken on as a consultant to the police for this case. A search of Claire's e-mails reveals some names of men she had met through a dating service and, while interviewing all of them, Frank is struck by the similarities between this case and a previously unsolved crime which was committed while he was still in the force. There's a varied list of characters and possible suspects which makes for an interesting yet smooth read. I always enjoy a John Harvey book and unhesitatingly recommend this one.

"Death, Elder thought, still a bit too close to her for comfort."

Frank Elder is a tormented man. Ever since his daughter was kidnapped and brutalized, he has carried the guilt of his ineffectiveness and what he believes was his part in the crime. Years later, the father-daughter relationship remains tentative, Katherine still healing and Frank trying to reconnect. Since moving to Cornwall, Frank is more isolated than ever, but his remote environment has allowed its own healing, the years of police work and Katherine's ordeal taking a toll on his considerable inner resources. When Frank's ex-wife asks for his help in locating the missing sister of a friend, Elder welcomes the opportunity to see his daughter and sharpen his detecting skills once more. The missing woman, Claire Meecham, is an enigma to her neighbors, ostensibly reserved, no social life outside her job, someone Claire's sister realizes she doesn't really know at all. Beneath the quiet exterior, Claire is a lonely woman searching for a relationship, visiting online dating sites and managing a few discreet assignations; but when Claire's body is discovered, fully clothed, at home in her own bed, Frank is reminded of another unsolved case that bears the earmarks of this particular killer. Delving into the former disappearance as well as Claire's, Elder cannot shake the feeling that the key to one unlocks the other. Elder is old school, conscientious and burdened by his recent past, unable to separate work from home in a single-minded passion to bring some relief to the suffering families of the victims. Working with a former associate, Maureen Prior, Elder resources old files, establishing the vaguest of potential connections. Nose-to-the-grindstone police work pays off for Elder, with a few diversions along the way; meanwhile he is vigilant about not settling on only one theory to the exclusion of other possibilities. Combining the sensitivity of a solitary divorced man whose daughter is recovering from a life-threatening trauma with the unparalleled skills of a veteran cop, Darkness & Light has the necessary ingredients; taut, controlled, yet emotionally fragile, this man on a mission discovers unexpected rewards and an opportunity to heal the sins of the past. Luan Gaines/2006.
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