Wednesday, June 12, 2024

Harbour Street - Ann Cleeves

 

(Not the cover on copy I read, but I much prefer this one.)

Harbour Street is book number six in Ann Cleeves's Vera Stanhope series, and it's a good one. Cleeves sometimes has a tendency to keep her main character behind the curtain until she's fully set up all the side characters and the mystery to be solved (even to approaching the 75-100 page-mark sometimes) but that's not the case with Harbour Street.

The first sentence of the novel is "Joe pushed through the crowd." As in Joe Ashworth, Vera's favorite detective, and Vera herself shows up on page 13 this way:

"Outside there was an enormous woman. She wore a shapeless anorak over a tweeded skirt. A wide face and small brown eyes. Her hair was covered by the anorak hood. On her feet, wellingtons. Her hair and her body were covered in snow...The abominable snow-woman..."

That rather comedic introduction of Vera is so dead-on that series fan will recognize the lonely detective long before Vera opens her mouth to introduce herself. And for me, this series is all about Vera and her evolving relationship with Joe, so this all made for a promising beginning to Harbour Street.

It's the Chrismas season, and Joe and his daughter are in Newcastle doing some relatively last-minute shopping when they notice that one of their fellow passengers has not gotten off the train with everyone else. For good reason. As it turns out, she's been stabbed to death.

Vera feels a little guilty about being so excited to have something interesting to take her mind off the season and her separateness, but soon she and Joe are trying to find out why anyone would have wanted to kill what seems to have been such a well thought of elderly woman like Margaret. Things begin to get complicated when a second woman is found dead in the little Harbour Street community because Vera is convinced from the beginning that the two murders have to be connected. She is not one to believe in coincidences like two murders happening so close together by sheer chance in a neighborhood as small as this one. And, of course, she's right about that.

So she and her crew start digging. And what they discover is going to take some real effort on everyone's part if any of them are going to be home on Christmas day. 

Harbour Street is intertwined with multiple suspects who come and go, and come again, as the investigation unfolds. Longtime fans of the series will already know this, but let me emphasize it for those who may be reading Ann Cleeves for the first time: keep a notepad handy. Jot down the names of side characters and how they relate to one another. Pay particular attention to flashbacks and how they seem to relate to the present day. If you do those things, you will fully appreciate just how intricately plotted an Ann Cleeves mystery always is. And although I've never managed to do it, you will have a good/fair shot at figuring out who the culprit is even before Vera figures it out for herself.

As usual, I enjoyed visiting Vera Stanhope and Joe Ashworth again, and look forward now to reading the few Vera Stanhope books I'm still holding in reserve. 

12 comments:

  1. You make this sound awfully enticing. I would like to get back to the Vera series, book #4 is the next for me to read, and I have a copy but can't find it. Maybe I can find a replacement copy at the book sale or maybe it will turn up sooner.

    I don't usually mind if the main character turns up later in the book. I still remember the first Vera Stanhope book which I read 10 years ago... it was so different from the rest of the series, and just a very good book.

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    1. It's a good series, Tracy, one that I especially enjoy because of the Vera character and her weird relationship with Joe Ashworth, her unofficial second-in-command kind of guy. I've only read only six of the ten, and still have numbers 5, 7, 8, and 9 to go.

      I think when it comes to series, I mainly read them because of the lead characters, so I like to get to them as soon as possible, especially because of the long wait between books.

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    2. Good news, I found my copy of the fourth book in the series. So I will hope to remember to fit it in my reading this fall.

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    3. That IS good news. I hate it when I feel certain that I bought a copy of something at one time or another and never can find it. Drives me nuts.

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  2. I've loved all of the Vera novels, and Cleeves is so good with building characters that feel genuine. Loved that in this one Vera stays at the B and B on Harbour Street to learn more about the community.

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    1. I agree, Jen. Vera's decision to spend so much personal time with the family running what was essentially the scene of the crime hotel was brilliant on her part. She was listening and watching everything around her the whole time she was around them. Vera is one of my all time favorites.

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  3. The 'abominable snow-woman'...that's hilarious. Yay for another good read in this series. :D

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    1. I love that whole description through the eyes of a woman who was surprised late at night by Vera's sudden appearance.

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  4. I read, or rather, listened to this one quite recently (then realized I had picked up a used paperback which was right in my living room) and also appreciated the intricate plotting. I can sometimes tell who is lying but in this and the next one I did not guess the murderer (she is also good at red herring characters). Two things I especially appreciated about this one - the way Vera went back time and again to Harbour Street because she knew the motive and murderer were there but she just couldn't get there and also how much she did not want to participate in the department's Secret Santa!

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    1. I never suspected who the culprit turned out to be in this one. As you mention, Cleeves is really good at creating red herrings, and I would have put my money on two of those. She had me convinced that I had figured it out, and I was just waiting for the wrap up. Show what I know. I will say, however, that Cleeves creates so many red herrings that I never take the first two or three of them very seriously. I've come to marking them off my list of suspects if they appear guilty to early. One of these days (if she hasn't already done it to me) Cleeves is going to circle all the way back to an early one and really throw me off. I did smile at Vera's aversion to the Secret Santa game and how relieved she felt about not having to do it in the end.

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  5. I thought it was the boyfriend but she made him easy to dislike.

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    1. I was leaning toward one of the women at the shelter, figuring that they had a fear of being exposed to something in their earlier life.

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