Tue 30 Mar 2021
Reviewed by LJ Roberts: CYNTHIA HARROD-EAGLES – Cruel As the Grave.
Posted by Steve under Reviews[9] Comments
Reviews by L. J. Roberts
CYNTHIA HARROD-EAGLES – Cruel As the Grave. Detective-Inspector Bill Slider #22. Severn House, hardcover, February 2021.
First Sentence: Atherton was singing in his Dean Martin voice.
Personal fitness trainer Erik Lingoss is found murdered in his flat by a young woman who fancied herself in love with him. A box full of cash in his closet, 700 pounds under his pillow, and his missing mobile phone indicates things may not be as indicated. The more Slider and his team investigate, the more suspects emerge. Under pressure to clear the case, they work to find the who and why of the murder.
Beginning a new book by Cynthia Harrod-Eagles is akin to being given one’s favorite dessert. First, there is no prologue, not even one masquerading as a first chapter. The story begins on page one and continues to the end. Second, wonderful dialogue filled with wry humor— “Let he who is without sin bore the pants off everybody else.” Last, the sense of time and place. Her evocative descriptions employ all the senses.
The characters are alive– “…Atherton stretched, catlike. Tall, elegant, sartor’s plaything, he was as out of place at a dreary crime scene as an orchid in a vegetable patch.” The balance is Slider, not a Lone-Ranger cop, but respected by a team where each has their role to play. The plot may initially present itself as straightforward, yet one knows it won’t stay that way long— “Thirteen thousand pounds. …Normal people don’t keep large amounts of cash in the wardrobe.”
Including characters’ families in the story adds humanity and dimension. Unlike the questionable stability of the relationships of Supt. Jim Atherton, his long time partner, Slider has an extended family of his wife, son and a child on the way, a daughter by his first marriage, a father and his partner. A wonderful hospital scene touches the heart.
The author’s use of language, including the chapter headings, is a pleasure. One small caution, or treat, is that it is very British, meaning there are numerous British terms and idioms. It can be confusing, but the meaning is easy enough to glean from the context— “The bathos almost made him smile.” The use of malaprops— “Putting the cat before the horse, aren’t you?” —and literary references are fun to spot. The banter between Slider and Atherton realistically reflects that of friends/colleagues who know each other well.
The plot focuses on the real police work of identifying the many suspects, following leads, and looking for evidence. What drives Slider as much as finding the killer is discovering the motive which is poignant.
Cruel As the Grave is such a good read. Harrod-Eagles is a skilled writer who evokes empathy for the killer. It was truly the dessert’s finishing touch.
Rating: Good Plus.
March 30th, 2021 at 8:06 pm
If nothing else it’s nice to see a detective who isn’t haunted by angst and driven to distraction by his personal life.
March 30th, 2021 at 8:45 pm
Ditto on that. I’ve not read any of the Slider books, though, and it looks like I should have, long before now. LJ, you make this sound like my kind of detective fiction.
March 30th, 2021 at 9:21 pm
I find it a very good series. There is some personal life in it, but it not overdone, and it’s realistic. She is a very good writer:
Bill Slider
1. Orchestrated Death (1991)
2. Death Watch (1992)
3. Necrochip (1993)
aka Death to Go
4. Dead End (1994)
aka Grave Music
5. Blood Lines (1996)
6. Killing Time (1996)
7. Shallow Grave (1998)
8. Blood Sinister (1999)
9. Gone Tomorrow (2001)
10. Dear Departed (2004)
11. Game Over (2008)
12. Fell Purpose (2010)
13. Body Line (2011)
14. Kill My Darling (2012)
15. Blood Never Dies (2012)
16. Hard Going (2013)
17. Star Fall (2014)
18. One Under (2015)
19. Old Bones (2016)
20. Shadow Play (2017)
21. Headlong (2018)
22. Cruel as the Grave (2020)
March 30th, 2021 at 11:03 pm
Twenty-two books in 30 years. That says a lot, doesn’t it?
March 30th, 2021 at 11:27 pm
“Let he who is without sin bore the pants off everybody else.â€
“…Atherton stretched, catlike. Tall, elegant, sartor’s plaything, he was as out of place at a dreary crime scene as an orchid in a vegetable patch.â€
I chuckled when i read those sentences. She goes in the to be read queue (I’m going to have to break the world record for oldest living person to read them all.)
March 31st, 2021 at 12:56 am
Wonderful, indeed. Terrific!
March 31st, 2021 at 5:50 am
You made it sound very interesting. Unfortunately, when I went to buy it I found out none of the books are on Kindle, tree books only., which I stopped buying years ago.
March 31st, 2021 at 7:02 am
Not only has she written 22 books in 20 years, but she has a ton of historical romances too.
I’m a big fan of this series, though I am about half a dozen books behind. (I have three or four on the shelf waiting to be read.) Atherton is always entertaining, and his relationship with Slider is the perfect complement.
As for Terry’s comment, I don’t know about the early books, but certainly the later ones are available on Kindle. My library has several of them available.
March 31st, 2021 at 7:08 am
I checked Wikipedia. The Morland Dynasty has 35 books written over 33 years (1980-2013), a family saga meant to put a fictional family into British history from the War of the Roses onward. She also has published over 20 single (presumably) romance novels, the six volume The War at Home series (about WWI, I believe), and books published as by “Emma Woodhouse” and “Eliz abeth Bennett” in the 1970s and ’80s.
My count of the Wikipedia list is 97 titles as of 2020.