Tuesday, October 20, 2009

Ice House by Minette Walters

Ten years ago, Phoebe Maybury's hateful husband David disappeared from Streech Grange after his wife caught him in bed with their traumatized daughter Jane. After the body has never been found she still live under the umbrella of suspicion of the village. Now Phoebe lives with her two friends, Anne & Diane, and the three reclusive English women have become the subject of censure and speculation during a new murder investigation.

After a rotting corpse is found in the ice house of Streech Grange, Chief Inspector Walsh sets out at once to prove it is the body of David Maybury, whom wife Phoebe was suspected of murdering when he was reported missing years earlier. Since no body was ever found, Walsh deduces that Maybury returned and was killed by Phoebe or one of her friends, Anne and Diane, who live with her at the Grange. Detective Sgt. Alan McLoughlin, however, isn't so sure, especially after the coroner says the dead man was older than David and the local belief that the three women are a lesbian menage a trois turns out to be untrue. But McLoughlin can't understand why the Grange's residents make the investigation so difficult by refusing to answer questions and sometimes openly lying.

I have been meaning to read this book for at least 8 years and finally got around to it. It is Walters first book and while at first is a bit slow, once she gets rolling the book just sucks you in. It is a intelligent, emotionally suspenseful mystery and really not a traditional British murder mystery at all. Yes there is a murder (maybe 2) but there is this suspense in wondering what is the real motive behind all this. At once point Anne is struck and left for dead. She is saved by McLoughlin who while going through his own troubles and spends the first quarter of the book drunk is really the only person who is objective enough to find the truth. McLoughlin's wife has left him for his best friend and former police detective so he isn't the most objective when it comes to women right now. Plus the 3 women seem to relish throwing their "lesbian" relationship in his face. But is it real or just a ruse? Because McLoughlin is starting to have feelings for Anne which offers us some romantic intrigue.

You really have pay attention and there were many times I had to go back and re-read. I originally tried this on CD but found myself getting frustrated with it so went back to reading. I'm really glad that I did as it lived up to what I had read about it and left me wanting to read more of her books. Walters really has a way of writing about subjects that make you uncomfortable and she really delves deep into the souls of the characters she writes about. I'm looking forward to trying her other books soon.