Friday, March 17, 2023

Treacherous Strand: An Inishowen Mystery by Andrea Carter

 



Reviewed by Jeanne

When the body of Marguerite Etienne washes up on a beach in Inishowen, solicitor Ben (Benedicta) O’Keeffe is troubled.  The French woman had come to Ben to make out her will not long before and knew the document had yet to be finalized.  Marguerite was determined to leave everything to her daughter. Unfortunately, the rules of client-solicitor confidentiality still apply so when sergeant Tom Molloy believes that Marguerite died by suicide, Ben can’t reveal the reasons she is certain that the woman was murdered. 

But she is certain.  And she intends to find the evidence to prove it.

This is the second in the Inishowen mysteries, but it can be read as a standalone.  For those like me who are a little sketchy on geography, Inishowen is in County Donegal in the northern part of Ireland and is a part of the Republic of Ireland. Author Carter, herself a solicitor, worked in Inishowen for several years.  All this is to say that she knows the territory well, both the physical location (which sounds lovely and wild) and the ins and outs of working there.  A number of the mysteries I’ve read that use Ireland as a location are written by Americans and while I hope they have done their research, I sometimes question a point or two. In these books I have no doubt that the author knows what she is writing about.

The mystery is well done; the plot is interesting and the reader shares Ben’s frustrations at not being able to reveal what she knows. However, the real appeal for me is the well-developed characters and strong setting.  Ben has a lot of baggage from the past; sometimes she deals with it better than other times.  She’s wary of forming relationships but is drawn to Malloy. Other characters are similarly nuanced.

The setting is well defined and distinctly Irish, all the while avoiding stereotypes. While some Irish expressions and phrasing appear occasionally, it isn’t laid on with a trowel, and the conversations are not written in dialect.

I’m definitely interested in reading more in this series, having enjoyed the first two.  It seems to me that I can see Carter’s confidence as a writer growing between the books, so I have high hopes as we move forward.

The books in the series are:

Murder at Whitewater Church

Treacherous Strand

Well of Ice

Murder at Greysbridge

The Body Falls

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