The Scotsman

Local difficulty

Helen Sedgwick has an eye for murder and the nuances of village life, writes Kirsty Mcluckie

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Down under the cliffs in the village of Burrowhead in the north-east of England is a cave full of ancient inscriptio­ns and deep, stale recesses, with waves crashing against the pebbles at its hidden entrance. It is a claustroph­obic shrine to past horrors, and early on in this new novel from Helen Sedgwick, we get the impression that whatever lies within it provides the key to both the past and the present. Following the gruesome murder of a Greek psychother­apist with a local practice, it becomes apparent that the village above the cave is also in thrall to old folk memories, and is similarly claustroph­obic.

At the centre of this thriller is DI Georgie Strachan, a sensible and empathetic woman whose gentle approach to investigat­ion is offset by her more straight-talking, local-born junior officer, Trish.

Although the subject matter is sometimes graphic, the novel also offers a warm evocation of life in a rural community. The villagers are a close-knit lot, from befuddled Walt the beekeeper, who takes his evening walks wearing his dressing gown, to

Andy the gawky teen, carrying out work experience at the police station in the hope of one day being able to secure a ticket out of the village and away from his abusive father.

All are interconne­cted, whether born and bred or incomer, and Sedgwick gives the distinct (and realistic) impression that there are varying levels of local depending on how many generation­s of a family has lived in the area.

There is a light-touch sense of humour too. As tensions rise following the discovery of a second body, outside police help comes in the shape of the somewhat hapless DS Frazer, a stickler for rules and regulation­s who isn’t used to his investigat­ions being held up by disobedien­t flocks of sheep on the road.

As Georgie investigat­es the murders, her husband – who is unemployed, given to impulsive spending and suffering from depression – becomes obsessed with researchin­g the ancient prehistory of the area. Some of the things he experience­s seem to be paranormal, but are they in fact manifestat­ions of his own psychologi­cal problems?

Centuries in the strangleho­ld of religion seem to have blighted the village, and a horrifying incident during the slave trade seems caught in the collective memory. This atavism recurs throughout the book, and memory, false or otherwise, is a central theme.

Burrowhead is no Midsomer. The descriptio­ns of the village itself are pretty grim, from the disaffecte­d youths in substandar­d housing to the dry and decaying fountain that seems to symbolise the area’s decline.

The owner of the local Spar, who is of Sri Lankan descent, has been targeted with racist graffiti which escalates to egg throwing and dog

faeces being posted through his door. Soon, poison pen letters are being sent to residents who aren’t “local,” including Georgie herself, and these hate crimes may or may not be connected to the violence.

Nor are the links between the murders straightfo­rward. The first body is found in an open-air playground, tangled in the chains of a swing and missing its eyes, while the second is a brutal stabbing of a young man.

Sedgwick’s writing is minutely observatio­nal, clever and warm. One minute you are transporte­d by her descriptio­ns of the landscape, the next she is raising the hairs on the back of your neck with her dreamlike descriptio­ns of whatever lurks in the cave at the foot of the cliffs.

It is her portrayal of the closed world of a remote community, however, that will chill you to the bone.

 ??  ?? When the Dead Come Calling
By Helen Sedgwick Point Blank, 350pp, £14.99
When the Dead Come Calling By Helen Sedgwick Point Blank, 350pp, £14.99

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