The
Ice Shroud by Gordon Ell – As set out in my
previous post I was invited by Craig Sisterson to participate in a worldwide
blog tour of the books short listed for the 2017 Ngaio Marsh Awards in New
Zealand. Craig asked me to review The Ice
Shroud, one of the finalists for the Best New Fiction Award.
There is a powerful graphic opening
to the book with a woman’s body being found frozen face down along the edge of
a river in a gorge on the South Island not far from Queenstown. Becoming a rock
descender, Detective Sgt. Malcolm Buchan goes abseiling down to the river to
free the body from the ice. The title effectively evokes the book.
When he subsequently sees the body
up top Buchan recognizes her as Edie Longstreet, a woman he “Had Known. Intimately.”
With their relationship several years in the past he hesitates and then decides
not to disclose the relationship. As Longstreet is a resident of the area he
knows her identity will soon be established. Concealing the relationship does
mean a continuing tension on whether the relationship will be discovered during
the investigation. I did find it hard to believe a Detective Sergeant would conceal
his relationship with the deceased.
Among the police officers assisting Buchan
are a pair of women. Detective Constable Deborah Somerville is a young woman
with an “athletic figure” and “shoulder-length blonde hair”. Traffic Sgt. Magda
Hansen has a “pleasant, even motherly-looking face”.
I appreciated that the primary
investigative methods involve the intelligence of the police officers.
While Longstreet enjoyed numerous
sexual relationships the search
for the killer, as with many investigations, turns
to financial issues. At her death Longsteet was running a business, Figments,
discreetly described as selling “saucy underwear” but the business is not doing
well. It is actually failing. While Queenstown is a resort community the
customer base for her merchandise is limited. How has she been able to keep the
business afloat?
Ngaio Marsh Awards |
There is some deft phrasing. On how
Longstreet was getting money:
‘I can’t understand how she got that,’ Constable Heaphy said.
‘It’s like she had a private line to the money god.’
Queenstown has 14,000 – 15,000
people and Longstreet has frequent interactions with members of the local
business establishment, casually known as the “Gang”. Members of the Gang meet
often for drinks at the end of the work day.
Reading about the Gang made me
reflect on my role in the business community of Melfort, here in Saskatchewan.
After 42 years in private legal practice I guess I would be considered part of
the establishment. In our community of 6,000 the “establishment” does not
gather socially as often as the fictional Gang in New Zealand. Our lives are
also considerably less colourful than Ell’s businessmen.
The men who make up the Gang resent
the impertinent police probing into their private and commercial lives. They
are accustomed to their lives of privilege.
Ell provides a fine picture of life
and landscape in the Queenstown region. The
Ice Shroud is a distinctive New Zealand story. I did wish the unpleasant
characters, especially men, were not consistently given unattractive
appearances.
I found the ending abrupt but
convincing. I had the impression there was some major editing. Ell is off to a
good start in crime fiction. I expect his next book to be better yet and I hope
to read it.
Thanks, Bill, for your thoughtful review. I'm glad you found a lot to like about this one. I thought Ells did an effective job of conveying the sense of small-town New Zealand, among other things. It will, indeed, be interesting to see what his next novel is like.
ReplyDeleteMargot: Thanks for the comment. Perspective comes from where you live. Living in a community of 6,000 I would describe Queenstown with more than double the population a medium size city.
DeleteThanks Bill, for the comprehensive view. I enjoyed the read and thought Ell, whose fiction debut comes at a later age, shows plenty of promise. I hope he will continue with the mystery writing. I'd read another.
ReplyDeleteCraig: Thanks for the comment. I admire Gordon starting to write crime fiction after having written about 30 other books, especially about nature.
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