Yorkshire Post - YP Magazine

A novel of ideas and a compelling thriller

- Review by Allan Massie

A Lesson In Cruelty by Harriet Tyce Wildfire, £16.99

Like many novels today, A Lesson In Cruelty comes with three pages of praise for the author’s previous novel. This is not encouragin­g.

Few of the names are well-known. One suspects that they often come from readers about whose judgment one knows nothing, even sometimes from the publisher’s own staff. So one often begins to read with no great enthusiasm. One is often right. Happily one is sometimes wrong. This is one such novel.

A young girl is brought in to share a cell with Anna. In the morning she is dead, her throat cut. Anna is immediatel­y suspected, but a duty solicitor secures her release. For some chapters we follow Anna’s early days in freedom. She is afraid, oppressed by guilt.

As the narrative gathers pace there are scenes with two women, both found guilty of murders, one a child killer, living on a loch island in the Highlands. Every week a boatman leaves supplies for them at a landing-stage. Why are they here?

Attention shifts to a young law student called Lucy. She is fascinated by Edgar, her Professor, a famous criminolog­ist with a special interest in the possibilit­y of rehabilita­ting murderers. His own first wife was murdered some years ago. Lucy eagerly does research for her brilliant teacher.

At a conference, he argues with an old friend Victor, a Peruvian lawyer, who had also been a friend of the murdered wife. Victor insists that there are murderers who should never be released. Edgar disagrees. It is clear that he is as attracted to Lucy as she to him.

That’s the setting. The plot which will also involve Edgar’s second wife quickens and becomes complicate­d.

It seems that Marie, the killer of Edgar’s wife, may be on the loose. It would be wrong for a reviewer to say more about it, for there are engaging twists and turns which will include a fine Buchanesqu­e chase to, rather than through, the Highlands.

The novel becomes a compelling thriller, not short of violence, horror, and ingenious misdirecti­on. Moreover, unusually for this sort of novel there is also much of intellectu­al interest and argument. It raises serious questions about the treatment of prisoners, especially female ones, and the possibilit­y of repairing broken lives such as Anna’s. Harriet Tyce has been a criminal lawyer and the legal-moral attitudes to murder are explored.

She has brought off a notable double, writing a serious novel about crime and punishment, Dostoevsky being quoted, while also creating a plot as outrageous­ly improbable as anything Agatha Christie ever wrote.

It’s an entertainm­ent which invites you to think seriously about the working of the law and our legal system. Especially in its treatment of convicted women. Moreover the characters with only one exception – rather an important one admittedly, ring convincing­ly true.

A novel of ideas which is also a gripping mystery-thriller is something difficult to bring off, but Tyce has managed to do just that.

It is also, I suppose what may be called a feminist book, written with deep sympathy for damaged women, though one in which, unusually, two of the most admirable characters are men.

I found myself carried along by the narrative, engrossed while also invited to think.

In future her publisher shouldn’t feel the need to offer so many admiring quotes, mostly from unknown or little-known writers. Tyce doesn’t need a swathe of recommenda­tions.

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