City on Fire #GrahamBartlett #CityOnFire

Not everyone wants the drugs epidemic to end

By Graham Bartlett https://policeadvisor.co.uk/ @gbpoliceadvisor

Published by Allison & Busby https://www.allisonandbusby.com/ @AllisonandBusby

350 pages ISBN 9780749030513 (HB)

Publication date 21 March 2024

City on Fire is the third novel in the Chief Superintendent Jo Howe series. Click on the link to read my review of the second book in the series Force of Hate.

I was allowed access to a pdf review copy on Net Galley.  Thanks to Josie at Allison & Busby for the invitation to join the blog tour and of course the Author.

The cover

A curious but quite striking cover. A picture of the Brighton sea-front but the title font picked out in flames, for reasons which will become clear.

My review

Chief Superintendent Jo Howe is determined to tackle the scourge of drugs on the streets of Brighton, a city that is turning into the drugs capital of England. Jo is only too aware that drug habits fuel crime, as addicts need easy cash to feed their addiction, and it destroys lives. This she knows from bitter experience as her sister Caroline succumbed to heroin, a life in dirty squats and on the streets, which led ultimately to her death. This death is still raw to Jo, she feels she let Caroline down, that she could have done more to help her. She now cannot atone for this sense of guilt to Caroline, but she is determined to help as many as she can who are in this predicament. She is the driving force behind Operation Eradicate, a two-pronged attack at the problem. Not only is there a concerted effort to reduce supply but also to get users into rehabilitation programs, and a new pharmaceutical heroin substitute being trialled is having a positive result. A somewhat controversial approach that needs time to mature, but not everyone is so positive.

The new drug is made by Respite Pharmaceuticals a company owned by Sir Ben Parsons, a formidable self-made millionaire with a vast web of useful contacts, people in high places. Respite has obviously invested millions is developing and patenting the drug, money that Sir Ben needs to earn back. However, in his eyes Operation Eradicate is proving to be too successful, curing addicts reduces his customer base which is bad for business. He wants complacent addicts hooked for the long term on the substitute. He needs to stop Howe and her scheme, and he thinks he knows how to do it.

Dark days ahead for Jo in a city about to explode.

One thing guaranteed from the author is authenticity, the policing, their actions and communications feel right, but without being dragged down by an obsession with procedure. The action is given every chance to develop and flow. Its not just the policing though, where he writes about the inter-agency work, the voluntary sector NGOs and prisons it comes over as though from experience rather than research. What a great asset when a writing a novel such as this.

If you have read the earlier novels in the series, you will know Jo is a strong and determined woman who is respected and admired by her peers. In this story she is really put through the wringer, dropped into heaps of jeopardy both personal and reputational, such that it almost brings about her complete mental destruction. A woman who is schemed against but also making poor judgement calls when under extreme pressure, which is both understandable and realistic. Stress effects people in different ways but we can all get to the point that Jo does where every step, every choice makes the situation worse.

It starts with a betrayal, from her loving and understanding journalist husband of all people. It is a professional one, forced to do it by editor, rather than a relationship betrayal with another woman. Once under the media microscope the pressure starts to mount, and Jo’s professionalism comes into doubt. That is merely the start as officers face threats and personal attacks causing support for Jo to dwindle and an increase of sick leave. When the supply of the synthetic drug dries up (thanks to carefully planning by Sir Ben) the streets boil over.

A fabulous description of a cold and calculating plan being executed step by step. Sir Ben has the contacts, the wealth and he also has the dirt on people and is not averse to a spot of blackmail to get his way. There is a suspicion amongst the public that some within the establishment can orchestrate cover ups, but here we can see such power wielded to destroy an individual. Something truly chilling to read.

It is the motivation of Sir Ben that interested me. Here we have a hugely successful businessman, one who enjoys the trappings of success, who is willing to destroy lives just to earn his drug development costs back. Apparently heartless, but then we learn of his poor mother, suffering from early onset dementia, whom he cares dearly for and lives at his house. There are some very touching scenes where he is comforting her which I am sure some carers will recognise. A real dichotomy of a man. I would have liked the relationship with his mother developed more, as we never discover how the dynamics were forged. Was she domineering, was he repressed, there is no mention of a love life for Sir Ben.

His obsession with finding a cure for his mother leads to a magnificently dramatic confrontation, one that has building up from the start. Action fans you are well catered for too, with bursts of aggression, bloodshed and personal jeopardy as momentum and tension are skilfully built up and released throughout, and at times you have to catch your breath.

At the core of the story is the notion that drugs companies just want to treat patients, to alleviate their symptoms rather than cure them. For them it’s a high stakes gamble to develop a drug, but being corporations, they want to earn profits and not just benefit mankind. What begins as an unlikely concept becomes a chilling possibility the more you think about it. There is a huge health and charity sector dedicated to developing and curing a vast array of diseases form cancer to Alzheimer’s, yet any success is a threat to their existence. A moral conundrum which we can only hope is addressed in an ethical way.

City on Fire is a convincing police procedural where a chilling businessman is determined to destroy the lives of those who get in his way.

City on Fire can be purchased via the publisher’s website here

The author

Graham Bartlett rose to become chief superintendent and the divisional commander of Brighton and Hove police. His first non-fiction book Death Comes Knocking was a Sunday Times Top Ten bestseller, which he then followed with Babes in the Wood. He co-wrote these books with bestselling author, Peter James, and has since published Bad for Good and Force of Hate starring Chief Superintendent Jo Howe. Bartlett is also a police procedural and crime advisor helping scores of authors and TV writers inject authenticity into their work.

Source: Publisher’s website

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Fatal Dose

By Brian Price https://www.brianpriceauthor.co.uk/ @crimewritersci

Published by Hobeck Books https://www.hobeck.net @HobeckBooks

407 pages ISBN tbc

Publication date 31 January 2023

Fatal Dose is the third crime thriller featuring DC Mel Cotton. My review of the second book in the series Fatal Hate can be found here.

I was sent an electronic copy to enable me to take part in this Blog Tour. I would like to thank Rebecca at Hobeck Books and the Author for the invitation to participate.

The Cover

Brilliant. Its dark, a sinister old poison bottle evocative of the ‘golden age of poisoners’ of around the turn of the twentieth century with even the colour scheme in keeping with the theme. I understand that the bottle used comes from the author’s own collection of antique poison bottles. A true man of science. If you have tea at Mr. Price’s house my advice is to be wary!

From the blurb

Death stalks Mexton

When a spate of poisonings hits the town of Mexton, DC Mel Cotton and her colleagues are left perplexed. All the deaths seem to be ingeniously planned and the police cannot see anything obvious to connect the victims.

Is a vigilante at work?

Jenny Pike, reporter for the Mexton Messenger, seems to think there’s a link and she’s not afraid to publish her controversial theories. All the victims seem to have got away with harming people in some way. Is that the connection? 

Fear from the East

Already stretched to the limit, Mel and her colleagues also face another huge challenge. A ruthless Albanian gang has launched a crime wave in the area and someone has murdered a notorious blackmailer.

How will the team cope? With a serial poisoner at large, is anyone safe?

My thoughts

Before opening the book take a few deep, calming breaths and try to clear your mind. A clear mind is an absolute necessity because the author has managed to cram so much within this novel that you won’t have room for anything else. The material within Fatal Dose would provide some authors with two novels possibly even three but Mr. Price manages to slot it all in telling a cogent story in his distinctive rapid-fire style. The action starts with an abduction which immediately grabs the reader’s attention and from then on it becomes a relentless page turner.

There are three strands to the plot which is intricate rather than complex and the strands cross and mingle but are described with great clarity.

The first strand is a serial poisoner at large in Mexton and here the author is in his element, displaying his great knowledge of the subject and despatching the victims with some wit. They come early in the novel with some rapidity and variety that I met them with some glee, oh great another one bites the dust. Though perhaps that’s just the way my mind works as I visualised them being carried out by Brian’s namesake Vincent in his gleeful hammy style. A cold and calculated way of killing and now with modern forensics much rarer. Poisoning was always regarded as a woman’s murder method, due to their size and strength, but I’m sure that there have been plenty of male murderers as well.

The second strand involves a blackmailer whose murder puts several people under the spotlight of suspicion. An underhand and controlling crime, the essence of which is well captured and allows for something from the past to be unearthed. All fully exploited by the author.

So, to counterbalance the old-style murder methods above, the third strand is thoroughly up to date as an Albanian crime game is muscling in on the action in sleepy Mexton where there is no organised crime. Organised crime gangs in London are nothing new, as well as home grown there have been concerns on Maltese and Greek Cypriots, with the Albanians being the current problem. The novelty here is a move away from the big cities, but with the County Lines distribution routes this could we be seen as a natural progression. These are brutal, savage men which gives the author a chance to include some darkness and violence to the story but without being too visceral with the descriptions.

This is a Mel Cotton novel and she once again is at the core of the action and jeopardy, but it’s not like her character hogs all the limelight. Indeed, DI Emma Thorpe is very much front and centre of the investigation and a number of interesting colleagues flit in and out of the story. This is all deftly done but being essentially a plot driven crime thriller there isn’t much space for great depth of character studies. We get glimpses of Mel’s home life, how her and Tom cope with the scrapes she gets in and their need for greater space for Tom’s parrots. Mel is a great character and one I would love to see developed, her past, her motivations and the connection with her father all offer great scope.

Fatal Dose is a frantic page turner of a crime thriller jam packed with incident and jeopardy.

Fatal Dose can be purchased direct from the publisher here.

The author

Brian Price is a chemist and biologist who retired from the Environment Agency in 2016. He is the author of Crime Writing: How to write the science and runs a website offering tips on science for crime writers (www.crimewriterscience.co.uk). He taught science and technology courses for the Open University for 26 years. He has advised number of leading crime writers on scientific aspects of crime.

Brian’s first crime novel, Fatal Trade, was published, as an ebook and paperback, by Hobeck Books on 14th September 2021. A free novella, Fatal Beginnings, is available from Hobeck Books at http://www.hobeck.net. The sequel, Fatal Hate, was published in April 2022 and third novel in the series, Fatal Dose, is due out on 31st January 2023.

Several of his short stories appear in the anthologies Cuckoo and Seventy Three, produced by the writing group Writers in Stone, and he has had stories published in the charity anthologies, The Dark Side of Christmas and Cooking the Books (published by Hobeck). His short story The Scent of an Ending appeared in the Crime Writers Association collection Music of the Night.

Source: Author’s Amazon profile

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