(27.
– 957.) The Quaker by Liam McIlvanney
– A serial killer has raped and killed three women during the winter of 1969 in
Glasgow. The papers have dubbed him “The Quaker” because he quotes the Bible on
sin, especially sinful women.
There
is a distinctly uncomfortable opening to the book. The first victim, Jacquilyn
Keevins, recounts the events leading up to her murder and how she was attacked
and how she hovers about her family, a ghostly presence of which they are
unaware.
The
murders have taken place amidst the devastation of urban renewal in Glasgow. Streets
are lined with condemned buildings, many still containing a few residents
determined to stay until the wreckers arrive at their door. A self-inflicted
war zone has been created for the Quaker.
The
police have a decent description of the Quaker:
…. A well-dressed
modern man with his short fair hair and his neat raincoat, his gallantry and
his hair trigger temper. Good manners. Nice diction …. Brown chalkstripe suit,
regimental tie. Thick watchstrap. Embassy Filter. Overlapping two front teeth.
Suede boots.
And
still he has eluded the police.
DI
Duncan McCormack is assigned from the Flying Squad to the team of officers
still pursuing the investigation. They vigorously resent his presence. They
rightly believe he has been designated to review their efforts and provide a
report that will justify the dismantling of the team and the unofficial end of
the investigation. They will be known as failures.
McCormack
was born and grew up in the Highlands. His father died young from the corrosive
effects of working in the furnace room of an aluminum plant:
You couldn’t see a
yard in front of your face, the air soupy with dust and fumes, and a noise like
Hades.
McCormack
has asthma he controls with a puffer.
He
is burdened with personal secrets.
Above
all he is a dedicated thoughtful police officer. He does not blunder about
using brute force to extract information.
McCormack
sees past the anger of the Quaker team. They are saturated with frustration:
Fifteen months of
work. A hundred cops in teams of twelve working fourteen hour days. They’d
taken 50,000 statements. They’d interviewed 5,000 suspects, visited 700 dentists,
450 hairdressers, 240 tailors. Scores of churches and golf clubs. How many man
hours did it come to – a million? Two? How could all these numbers add up to
zero?
So
many fair haired men have been suspected, informed upon and viewed by the
sister of a murder victim who saw the Quaker that cards have been issued by the
police to men cleared so they do not continue to be harassed.
While
McCormack conducts his review safecracker, Alan Paton, is contacted to come
back to Glasgow from London to join a team planning to rob an auction house of
jewels. Initially reluctant he decides to participate. The return will be large
and the risk is mangeable.
How
McIlvanney connects the commercial robbery with the serial killer investigation
reflects his skill as a writer.
And
then a fourth murder turns all the analysis, too often assumptions, into turmoil.
The investigation must begin anew.
McCormack
is a sleuth to remember. His tenacity and intelligence ensure a thorough
investigation. He has the rare ability to tackle a problem he has failed to
solve by reflecting and taking a new approach. Human nature normally leads us
to repeatedly tackle a problem in the same way thinking we must have missed an
approach to solution in our first or second or continued attempts.
The
plot was clever. There was a twist involving the actions of a suspect that was
brilliant but to describe would be a huge spoiler.
The Quaker is one of the
best works of crime fiction I have read in 2018. I want to read more of
McIlvanney. His book, Where the Dead Men Go,
was the winner of the Ngaio Marsh Award for Best Novel in 2014. I expect The Quaker to be on the shorlist for the
2019 Awards.
(I
had not planned to read back to back books by New Zealand writers. I read Marlborough Man knowing I had a specific
date on this year’s Ngaio Marsh Awards blog tour for my review. I recently
received a copy of The Quaker from the
Canadian publisher, House of Anansi. I appreciate them providing me with the
book. It was still on my desk waiting to go on the TBR pile when I finished Marlborough Man so I picked up The Quaker and could not put it down. I
found my reading accelerating a pace with McCormack’s investigation.)
I'm very glad you enjoyed this as well as you did, Bill, McIlvanney is definitely a talented writer. Normally, I do not care for stories with a serial killer motif. But that doesn't mean that there can't be an excellent one here and there. I'm glad you though this was one of them.
ReplyDeleteMargot: Thanks for the comment. I do not look for serial killer mysteries but I am glad I read The Quaker.
DeleteThis sounds very good but very dark. I didn't realize the author was from NZ - is he the son of William McIlvanney, who read very good crime books many years ago? I think he might have moved to NZ.
ReplyDelete* that should say 'who WROTE very good' etc, as I'm sure you guessed!
DeleteMoira: Thanks for the comment.No problem with the errant word. They enter every writer's life.
DeleteWhile hard to express precisely it is dark without being very dark.
He is the son of William McIlvanney. Liam moved to New Zealand 10 years ago where he is a Professor of Scottish Studies at the University of Otago.