THE SITE FOR DIE HARD CRIME & THRILLER FANS
AudiobookReviews

The Red Road

2 Mins read

Written by Denise Mina, narrated by Cathleen McCarron — Denise Mina has earned her place among Scotland’s most distinguished authors. This award-winning novel about the long, entangling tails of murder has its beginning in Glasgow in 1997, when a young boy is accused, convicted, and imprisoned for years for murdering his brother. Those events resurface in the current day, in which Detective Inspector Alex Morrow is increasingly dubious about her own testimony in the same (now grown) man’s trial for arms-dealing, not to mention her future with the police force. Her doubts come to the fore when the fingerprints of the accused turn up at a recent murder scene, one where it would have been impossible for him to have been present. The reader/listener knows from early on that he was falsely imprisoned for his brother’s murder and who the real killer was, a 14-year-old prostitute, but who mixed up the fingerprints? And why?

The tentacles of the conspiracy reach far and wide, and over the intervening 15 years. They even may extend as far as Morrow’s brother Danny, a known gangster, but one she’d rather not be involved in bringing to justice. Meanwhile, all the people involved in the earlier false accusation and coverup, if that’s what it was, have their own reasons to want to shut her investigation down. Despite their efforts to thwart her, Morrow is determined to persist. And in doing so, she must confront the crucial difference between justice and law enforcement.

A more complete summary of this complex plot is available here, in the review of the print version of this book.

Focusing on this as an audiobook, despite my cred as a devoted audiophile, it is not totally satisfactory. The plot is complicated – a plus in a print volume – and the characters so numerous that it is hard to keep the story straight. The narration is in part responsible for this, as there a is less sharp delineation among character voices than typical. Glaswegians may well be able to detect subtle differences in characters’ accents (class, etc), but my American ear could not. Generally, authors stick with a particular narrator for all their books, at least in a series, although Mina has had several readers, with McCarron her most recent.

Read about Denise Mina’s latest book The Long Drop here.

Hachette Audio
Audiobook/CD
£20.49

CFL Rating: 4 Stars 


Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.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

Related posts
KindlePrintReviews

Murder in the Scottish Highlands by Dee MacDonald

Bed, breakfast and… butchery? It’s not exactly what Ally McKinley had in mind when she decamped from Edinburgh to run a guesthouse in the picturesque village of Locharran in the Scottish Highlands, but she soon discovers that murder and the solving thereof offer a great…
iBookKindlePrintReviews

The Dark Wives by Ann Cleeves

Ah Vera pet, it’s good to have you back on our bulging bookshelves! The British TV series is all very well, but as we crime fiction lovers know from experience, there’s nothing that can replace the joy of actually reading a story and The Dark…
KindlePrintReviews

Last Night at Villa Lucia by Simon McCleave

What could be more appealing than a murder mystery set in an elegant villa high on a hill overlooking the Tuscan countryside? Prolific crime novelist Simon McCleave’s Last Night at Villa Lucia feels like a vacation from the first page, as the villa’s English owner…
Crime Fiction Lover