THE SITE FOR DIE HARD CRIME & THRILLER FANS
iBookKindlePrintReviews

Murder Mile

2 Mins read

Written by Tony Black — The term ‘tartan noir’ might have been coined for Tony Black. His Gus Dury series, following the gradual downward spiral of an Edinburgh-based private investigator with an Olympic grade drink problem and a tangled love life, was a brutal tour de force which breathed new life into a stale sub-genre. Now he’s turned his attention to the police procedural and Murder Mile is the second outing for DI Rob Brennan, a complex and brooding character who makes Rebus look positively chipper by comparison.

Brennan comes into this book with a full payload of demons, trouble with his wife, trouble with his superiors, not to mention the lingering taint of a murdered brother. So, when the body of young woman is found strangled and mutilated on the outskirts of Edinburgh he can’t shake off her suffering with the usual professional detachment. Lindsay Sloan was a good girl and Brennan knows what the world does to good people. It grinds them down and punishes them, while it rewards the thugs and back stabbers. He wants resolution for her family, even if it means slamming up against the police machine he is fast coming to despise.

Soon he discovers that Lindsay isn’t the first woman to die in such horrific circumstances and the prospect of a serial killer stalking the streets of Edinburgh becomes inescapable, along with the knowledge that his hated oppo DI Gallagher is trying to muscle in on the case, out for glory and backed to the hilt by their DCS. The office politics threaten to swamp the case but Brennan pushes on, juggling his wife’s ire and his daughter’s ambivalence, delving into dark territory within himself as he tries to crack the mind of a vicious killer the press have dubbed the Edinburgh Ripper.

Brennan isn’t the only person on the trail though. Neil Henderson, a freshly streeted pimp with debts owing to one of the city’s toughest loan sharks, has something Brennan doesn’t – Angie. She used to be a good girl too, but heroin and hooking have taken their toll and when she tells Henderson she knows who the killer is he scents a way out of his current financial problems. But first he’s got to get Angie to give up a name.

Murder Mile is a police procedural for people who hate police procedurals. Black doesn’t get mired in the minutiae of the day-to-day slog like many writers and Brennan is not your typical copper. He’s fiercely introspective and much of the book is taken up with his musings on the wider ramifications of the case and the general unpleasantness of the world around him, whether it’s the fate of girls like Angie, who slide down onto the streets, or the cold ambivalence of couples sitting in a cafe without talking to one another. The book is suffused with his bleak world view, unrelenting and precisely observed, creating a version of Edinburgh which is pure Black.

With Murder Mile Tony Black has put the heart back into the serial killer novel. It’s dark, yes, and deeply unpleasant in places, as it should be, but he hasn’t played to shock and there’s a refreshing lack of cheap gore. Rob Brennan is the perfect guide to follow through the criminal underworld, a bundle of rage and righteousness, and after reading Murder Mile the next fictional DI you come across will have a lot to live up to.

It’s available now on Amazon and iTunes, and the paperback comes out in September.

Preface/Arrow
Kindle/iBook/Print
£8.09

CFL Rating: 5 Stars


Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Related posts
KindlePrintReviews

What Doesn't Kill Us by Ajay Close

Ajay Close’s new crime thriller is a work of fiction inspired by the notorious Yorkshire Ripper case of the 1970s, which gained huge media coverage and prompted a massively inefficient manhunt. In that case, the police eventually identified the killer, but were severely criticised for…
KindlePrintReviews

Sleeping Dogs by Russ Thomas

Sleeping Dogs is the fourth outing for DS Adam Tyler and life just keeps getting harder for the South Yorkshire detective sergeant. One way or another he’s been in trouble ever since he first appeared in Firewatching in 2020. Between his bosses and the criminals…
iBookKindlePrintReviews

Midnight and Blue by Ian Rankin

Crime fiction has been invaded by a veritable army of silver sleuths in recent years, from Richard Osman’s Thursday Murder Club series to books by Elly Griffiths and Steph Broadribb. But leading the charge is Ian Rankin and his creation John Rebus. However, like Michael…
Crime Fiction Lover