Taking the reader into the heart of the action

Review: Murder at the Caravan by David Pearson (The Book Folks)

Authors are driven to write by a range of inspirations, everything from compelling character to mysterious plots, from the need to write with pace to an instinctive feel for landscape, from powerful themes to sharply political points that emerge from their stories. For many of the very best crime writers, a major motivation is clearly sense of place; think Colin Dexter and the dreaming spires of Oxford, Ian Rankin and the gloomy tenements of Edinburgh, the brilliant wordsmith Peter May and Scotland’s Highlands and Islands. The same can be said of David Pearson and his Galway Homicides series of crime novels which are set on his beloved west coast of Ireland.

The novels are interlaced with the author’s passion for the area and, as with Messrs Dexter, Rankin and May, that love of place allows him to create stories that have a strong sense of authenticity. To read David Pearson is to feel that you are in Galway, to feel the rain driving in your face and the wind whipping along the coast.

The books in the series are not just about landscape, of course, and each one is driven forward by plots which create a sensed of jeopardy and tension and by beautifully-drawn characters.

Murder at the Caravan is an excellent example, beginning when a woman calls police to report that her brother has not turned up for a festive dinner. The task of investigating his disappearance falls to Sergeant Sean Mulholland at the local Garda station in a small town on the west coast of Ireland. Mulholland heads out to the caravan overlooking the ocean but the missing man is nowhere to be seen and a police search leads to the discovery of a badly-beaten body in undergrowth near the caravan.

As with all the books in the series, David Pearson draws the reader into the narrative, posing questions which demand answers and developing the story with skilful use of the aforementioned sense of place, crackling dialogue and a plot which twists and turns.

Colin Dexter, Ian Rankin and Peter May are well worth a read if you like novels that excel at sense of place but so, this humble reviewer would venture to suggest, is David Pearson if you have not already done so. The fact that his novels regularly appear in the Amazon best-seller lists would seem to suggest that increasing numbers of readers have come to the same conclusion.

Views: 12

Add a Comment

You need to be a member of John Dean Crime Novelist to add comments!

Join John Dean Crime Novelist

Latest Activity

John Dean shared their blog post on Facebook
Thursday
John Dean shared their blog post on Facebook
Thursday
John Dean shared their blog post on Facebook
Thursday
John Dean shared their blog post on Facebook
Apr 19
John Dean shared their blog post on Facebook
Apr 18
John Dean shared their blog post on Facebook
Apr 18
John Dean shared their blog post on Facebook
Apr 18
John Dean shared their blog post on Facebook
Apr 14
John Dean shared their blog post on Facebook
Apr 14
John Dean shared their blog post on Facebook
Apr 14
John Dean posted a blog post

Taking the reader into the heart of the action

Review: Murder at the Caravan by David Pearson (The Book Folks)Authors are driven to write by a range of inspirations, everything from compelling character to mysterious plots, from the need to write with pace to an instinctive feel for landscape, from powerful themes to sharply political points that emerge from their stories. For many of the very best crime writers, a…See More
Apr 14
John Dean posted blog posts
Apr 11
John Dean posted a blog post

Author re-launches online crime fiction course

Best-selling crime novelist and creative writing tutor John Dean has launched the latest version of his online Crime Fiction Course.The course, which runs in eight parts and can begin at a time and date to suit the writer, helps emerging authors to improve their writing and aims to increase their chances of being successful, either in competitions or admissions to…See More
Apr 9
John Dean shared their blog post on Facebook
Apr 3
John Dean shared their blog post on Facebook
Apr 3
John Dean posted a blog post

Crime writer ready for challenges ahead

I was pleased to hear that crime writer Vanessa Fox O’Loughlin has been elected as the new Chair of the Society of Authors.The novelist takes over from Joanne Harris to begin a two-year term as Chair of the SoA’s board of directors. Joanne has held the position since 2020 and has now come to the end of her second two-year term.Vanessa, who writes crime as Irish…See More
Apr 3

Videos

Members

© 2024   Created by John Dean.   Powered by

Report an Issue  |  Terms of Service