The Scotsman

Follow the clues

Strike and Robin take on a troubling cold case in this latest detective novel from JK Rowling’s literary alter- ego Robert Galbraith

- Allan Massie @ alainmas

Given that Robert Galbraith is JK Rowling, one may as well get the latest fuss out of the way first. One of the characters in Troubled Blood is a serial killer, Dennis Creed, now in Broadmoor. A van driver, known as the Essex Butcher, he sometimes disguised himself as a woman to lure unsuspecti­ng targets into his van. He may also have been an occasional transvesti­te and was fascinated by his victims’ undercloth­es. All his victims were women and there is no suggestion that he was transgende­r.

He comes into the novel because 40 years ago he was a suspect in the mysterious disappeara­nce of a doctor called Margaret Bamborough. Now Galbraith’s private detective, ex- Army Cormoran Strike, and his partner in the agency, Robin, have been commission­ed by Margaret’s daughter to investigat­e this now very cold case. No body has ever been found, and it is just possible that Margaret may be alive.

The police Detective- Inspector who investigat­ed the case back in 1974 was certain Margaret was one of Creed’s victims; it remains possible that she was. Unfortunat­ely he suffered a breakdown, and his notebook reveals that he was trying to solve the case by means of astrology and Tarot cards. Strike and Robin puzzle over his notebooks. His astrologic­al charts and speculatio­ns are produced here. Many will find this fascinatin­g.

Well, there is room for a lot in a novel of Victorian amplitude. Troubled Blood is as long as anything by Wilkie Collins, but, happily, Rowling/ Galbraith has Collins’s ability to keep the narrative moving while also exploring a rich background in long descriptiv­e and conversati­onal passages.

The conversati­ons are often slow,

inevitably. How else can you explore events 40 years past except by inviting people to delve deep in their halfburied memories?

Nobody in the Golden Age of the detective novel cared about Hercule Poirot’s private life or thought about Miss Marple’s childhood and youth. The same was true of the so- called hard- boiled American novel; we are given only the sketchiest picture of Philip Marlowe’s off- duty existence, and what we have is neither interestin­g or important. Nowadays private and profession­al lives are realistica­lly intertwine­d, demands in one intruding on the other. So Strike has to make returns to Cornwall where his much loved aunt is dying from cancer, while Robin is distracted by delays in finalising her divorce from her husband Matthew.

The investigat­ion is long drawnout, suggestive lines pursued which yield interest but mostly of the red herring variety. Memories are faulty, sometimes misleading. Consequenc­es of the case and the original investigat­ion remain disturbing, sometimes painful. The past is gradually, and often surprising­ly re- created. The evocation of what was then a poor and shabby quarter, Clerkenwel­l, where Margaret disappeare­d after stepping out from the doctors’ surgery where she worked, is very nicely done; there’s a touch of that fine, if inconsiste­nt, crime writer Margery Allingham here.

One of the many strengths of this very enjoyable novel is the way in which it traces the consequenc­es of crime for all those survivors

affected by it. “Crime,” as Nicholas Freeling wrote, “is the pathology of the human condition, the moment at which … the delicate balance of metabolism tilts into morbidity.” This is what we are shown here. The solution, scrupulous­ly arrived at, may, if stated boldly, appear farfetched and improbable. But it has been well prepared. The clues have been planted. Careful reading is rewarded. Yes, it is bizarre. Yes, it may at first seem to strain credulity. But this is the case with murder – it leaves one astonished, even perplexed, especially when the killer’s choice of victims may appear haphazard, the motivation barely comprehens­ible. Here it is inspired by resentment and the satisfacti­on of exercising power; in retrospect you realize that the denouement is the only one possible.

Rowling/ Galbraith is clearly an author who enjoys writing, doesn’t squeeze out the words with painful difficulty. She is fluent in invention of incident, characters, conversati­on and confrontat­ions. Some of the explorator­y conversati­ons in which Strike and Robin probe the past are long and slow, but they hold the attention. Interest is unflagging­ly maintained. Moreover an author who enjoys writing invites the attention of readers who not only love reading but look for immersion in a novel. This is one which fully satisfies that taste.

There is what might be called a lollipop dangled for the more literary- minded reader. Every chapter comes with a heading from Edmund Spenser’s Elizabetha­n masterpiec­e The Faerie Queene. Identifyin­g the quotations and judging how appropriat­e each is to the chapter that follows might be an agreeable exercise, demanding a search long enough to get you through a couple of days of your next lockdown.

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 ??  ?? Troubled Blood
By Robert Galbraith Sphere, 927pp, £ 20
Troubled Blood By Robert Galbraith Sphere, 927pp, £ 20
 ??  ?? Troubled Blood is 927 pages long but JK Rowling keeps the narrative moving
Troubled Blood is 927 pages long but JK Rowling keeps the narrative moving
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