‘This is not a detective story, this is a story about a detective’
Macmillan|5 September 2019|337 pages|e-book|Review copy|3*
Years ago I enjoyed reading a few of Jeffrey Archer’s books, including Not a Penny More, Not a Penny Less and Kane and Able. Archer is a prolific author, but I haven’t read any of his later books or his diaries about his time in prison. But I was interested when I saw that he had started a new series about William Warwick – Nothing Ventured. It is the first in the series of books following William’s progress from detective constable to the commissioner of the Metropolitan Police.
It is indeed, a story about a detective, rather than a detective story and as such it is rather episodic, following William Warwick’s career.
William joins the Metropolitan Police force, against his father’s wishes. Sir Julian Warwick QC, had hoped his son would join him in chambers and train to be a barrister, like his sister Grace. He works on the beat in Lambeth before transferring to the Art and Antiques Squad at Scotland Yard, where he becomes involved in a number of cases of fraud and theft, including tracing the whereabouts of a phial of the moon dust brought back from the Apollo 11 mission by Neil Armstrong, and arresting an old man who had forges the signatures of famous authors in first editions. Whilst investigating the theft of a Rembrandt painting, the Syndics of the Cloth Makers Guild, from the Fitzmolean Museum in Kensington, he meets Beth Rainsford, a research assistant at the gallery and they fall in love almost at first sight – but Beth has a secret that she keeps from him.
The premise is promising, but it’s written in a very straight-forward and factual style and my overall impression, despite the crime elements, is that this is a rather mundane and bland novel. William does this, does that, goes here, goes there, often at a break-neck pace that gives impetus. But the characters are drawn very sketchily with little depth – William is an intelligent young man, precocious and naive, eager to please and to learn, his father, Sir Julian, a suave, elegant and successful QC and Grace, his sister, an up and coming young barrister, and so on.
I suppose it is the base for the rest of the series but I found it too predictable. However, I thought the court scenes and the final little twist at the end enjoyable and I’m wondering if I want to go one to read the next book in the series which focuses on William’s time as a young detective sergeant in the elite drugs unit. I’m not sure that I do want to – there are so many more enticing books to read.
My thanks to Macmillan for an e-book review copy via NetGalley
I have enjoyed a few of Jeffrey Archer’s books as well, but I think you have to read him in small doses. I found there are too many similarities in style and content across his books and to some extent they lack nuances. Don’t think I am tempted by this one.
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I hope I haven’t put you off – plenty of other people have rated it highly.
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No, don’t worry. To me Archer works best in small doses at a time, so it will probably be a little while, before I read another of his books.
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Sorry to hear that this one didn’t absorb you as you’d have liked, Margaret. The topic does sound interesting, though, and I do give Archer credit for the many different (and different kinds) of books he’s written.
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I haven’t read enough by Archer to know much about his other books – but as I said in my post I did like Not a Penny More, Not a Penny Less and Kane and Able, so I was disappointed with this book.
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