THE BLOOD DIMMED TIDE
Rennie Airth
Penguin Books
ISBN: 0330484729
May 2006
Mystery
www.penguin.com
Reviewed By Wendall Sexton
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My expectations when I began my read of Rennie
Airth's THE BLOOD-DIMMED TIDE, I must confess, were not very
high. My previous book had excelled in story, characters, and
the overall construction of a plot that blended fictionalized
tale with historical fact; how could my next book even hope to
compare? Airth's murder mystery of 1932
I continued my read in spite of this initial
dismay, and I encountered not just a thrill-packed tale of the
worst danger imaginable done to an individual person, here,
within these pages, was a grand example of a police detective
force (Scotland Yard) at the investigative best in
deducing the steps of a madman.
It was the classic good versus evil scenario.
The story begins as thus: a girl is missing.
Twelve-year-old Alice Bridger disappeared after walking with a
friend leaves her for a moment to retrieve something from her
home. When she returned,
John and Helen Madden come onto this scene after
a leisurely drive across the countryside. John, formerly of
Scotland Yard, sees his dormant policeman's intuition kick in,
jumping on a lead given by an old tramp, Topper, who comes to
them with the girl's shoe. When he and the constable in charge
of the search discover the girl's body, John knows they have a
villainous killer roaming loose.
The question now before them was where they
should look for the monster responsible for such an act. Who
to look for has been decided by the local police, as Topper
mentioned another tramp, Beezy, he was supposed to meet; but
Madden's instincts tell him, from the devastation he observed
done on the girl's body, such are not the actions of a wandering
vagabond. What he saw was clearly more heinous than a tramp in
a panic.
So the investigation is on. Track down the
killer of little Alice Bridger before he kills again – and again
– and again. However, as Scotland Yard takes over the case (at
Madden'’s suggestion), a pattern develops that predates
Alice Bridger and even extends beyond
How can Scotland Yard confront such a significant
man, in the British governing hierarchy, when all they have to
go on is the killer might have driven a rarely-seen particular
car identified from a previous killing years earlier? A car
this certain individual owned?
I believe what thrilled me the most from THE
BLOOD-DIMMED TIDE was not the gravity of the crime portrayed.
Any number of other mysteries use sexual assault and murder upon
children plot lines. What I thought was unique here was how the
egregious nature of the crime, by an assailant as nefarious as
the devil himself, was soundly met by the investigators of
Scotland Yard with the same zeal as this demon pursued his
victims. In other words, evil at its worst meets good at its
best.
John Madden is clearly the intuition, but the
investigation employs more resources of British police force
than just him. They explore every lead; they develop
hypotheses; they interview witnesses; they track down clues.
There are no major or minor characters here. Everyone has a
role to play.
Madden's wife, Helen, not a police officer, casts
in her perspective with her deep concern for her husband's
welfare in the dangerous world of police work. Such adds a bit
of drama to the thrill of the chase when she desires to push him
away from the investigation, but his skills and talents rise him
up for the insatiable challenge of the pursuit. It is basically
something he was born to do.
THE BLOOD-DIMMED TIDE is worth the full attention
of anyone who loves a good mystery, not just for the sake of
being a good mystery. It is worth one's time because it is a
good story that makes its characters real and pertinent. Even
the time period itself plays a factor. 1932 in
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