Tangled Web UK Review April 2006
File Updated: 24/04/2006

Buy at Amazon Price A Child's Game by John Connor
pbk out February 06 (Orion) at £9.99

It seems we readers demand more and more flawed heroes. There was a time when the main character in a mystery was quite flawless – human maybe, quirky perhaps, but essentially someone you could introduce to your parents without a qualm. Not so any more. And John Connor's character, Karen Sharpe, must be the most flawed of the lot. She isn't even Karen Sharpe, and she certainly doesn't want to be whoever she is. Connor has been a barrister employed by the CPS, and apparently has met an undercover officer whose life had been messed up by the work. So he must know what he's talking about when he creates this stark merging of his main character's own life and that of her undercover persona.
Stijn, a vicious South African criminal, murders a man in the most gruesome way and sets it up as a suicide. The mysterious Francis Doyle, working for an arm of the security services, is hunting Karen Sharpe who has gone missing. Meanwhile, Anna Hart and her daughter Rachel are due to fly off on a holiday paid for by her lover, Nick Hanley. Only, they end up kidnapped. And it looks like Stijn's victim is Nick Hanley, whose body is identified by his sister Diana. DS Pete Bains, one time lover of Karen Sharpe, is on the case of Hanley's murder. Then it emerges that Anna Hart is Karen Sharpe working under cover trying to find out about Hanley's involvement in drugs, fraud and terrorism. The strange thing is, Stijn is still looking for Nick Hanley.
This is a fast-paced and convoluted book, full of violent acts. But the mainspring of the action is the mental conundrum of the main protagonist – Karen Sharpe herself. You may find yourself irritated initially by the lack of concessions to someone coming to the Karen Sharpe series afresh, without having read the previous novels in which she has appeared. This is the third one, following on from Phoenix and Playroom. It takes some time to glean information about Sharpe's troubled background, her work with the security services in Northern Ireland, and just who Doyle works for. The added complication of her being Anna Hart at the outset – actually being, not just acting a part – is a puzzle. But then, Connor is maybe suggesting that is how an undercover officer can feel. Nevertheless, ride the current and all will become clear. Well, almost. It is par for the course that Sharpe gets bashed about quite a bit in these stories, and this one is no exception. She suffers a violent sexual assault. She is also far more central to the action that are an earlier generation of detectives. We enter deep into her head, and the dilemma of her identity and feelings about her life are the core of the story. Another modern trend. Sharpe fans will love it. Noir fans will take to the brooding atmosphere and harsh depiction of the unflinching violence. New readers may be advised not to start here, but read the other books first. Then read this without fail. There's a fourth on the way, and the BBC have an option on the series.


( Ian Morson Author of Falconer books and short listed for 1999 Ellis Peters Historical Crime Dagger)

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