HIGH drama on the low-lying Norfolk fens can only mean one
thing… forensic archaeologist Ruth Galloway is back to help solve another
baffling murder mystery. The Lantern Men is the twelfth gripping book in the award-winning
Dr Ruth Galloway series and comes from the pen of Elly Griffiths, an
accomplished and elegant contemporary crime writer whose work includes the entertaining
Brighton mysteries set in the post-war 1950s.
The Galloway series, set against the alluring backdrop of
Norfolk’s fenlands and starring a cast of now familiar and much-loved
characters, has become cult reading, and was inspired by Griffiths’ husband who
gave up a city job to train as an archaeologist, and her aunt who lives on the
Norfolk coast and filled her niece’s head with the myths and legends of the
area.
For any readers who have still not discovered these
addictive mysteries, Griffiths’ stories are classic all-round crime
entertainment with clever, character-driven plots, some astute social
observation, lashings of dark humour, a superbly evoked sense of place, and
immaculate detective work.
ADDICTIVE MYSTERIES: Elly Griffiths |
But back in Norfolk, her former lover, DCI Harry Nelson, who
is also father of her ten-year-old daughter Katie, fears that Ivor March,
recently convicted of killing two women, is also guilty of murdering two more
women, with whom March had connections and who disappeared from the same
fenland area.
When March, who is now behind bars, confirms Nelson’s
suspicions, he offers to personally show Nelson where the other bodies are
buried, but only if Ruth, who was not assigned to the original case, will do
the digging.
Curious, but wary, Ruth agrees and is drawn back to the
place she left behind with some reluctance. March tells Ruth that the women’s
bodies are buried near a village bordering the fens, said to be haunted by the
Lantern Men, mysterious figures holding lights who lure travellers to their
deaths. But is March himself a lantern man, luring Ruth back to
Norfolk? What is his plan, and why is she so crucial to it? And are the
killings really over?
Griffiths found her inspiration for The Lantern Men in a
fascinating slice of Norfolk folklore which tells the tale of mysterious figures
who prowl the marshes at night and use lanterns to guide unsuspecting
travellers to their deaths on treacherous ground.
Click HERE for Lancashire Post review
Click HERE for Lancashire Post review
Harnessing this creepy legend, she weaves a tension-packed,
multi-layered mystery in which the atmospheric fens – with their flat, damp
fields reaching endlessly into the horizon and deep, waterlogged ditches – play
an eerie supporting role.
And once more we find the intrepid, painstakingly
professional Ruth and her more impatient and quick-tempered sidekick and
one-time lover, Harry Nelson, providing not just the brains and brawn for the
murder investigation, but the intriguing, complex relationship at the heart of
this cosy, compelling and clever series.
Written with Griffiths’ trademark style and wit, and with
plot, atmospherics and personalities in perfect harmony, this is an excellent
addition to an outstanding series.
(Quercus, hardback, £19.99)
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