The Keeper by Tana French

Penguin| 2 April 2026| 524 pages| e-book| Review copy|5*

Description from Amazon

On a cold night in a remote Irish village, a girl goes missing.

Sweet, loving Rachel Holohan was about to be engaged to the son of the local big shot. Instead, she’s dead in the river.

In a place like this, her death isn’t simple. It comes wrapped in generations-old grudges and power struggles, and it splits the townland in two. Retired Chicago detective Cal Hooper has friends here now and he owes them loyalty, but his fiancée Lena wants nothing to do with Ardnakelty’s tangles. As the feud becomes more vicious, their settled peace starts to crack apart. And when they uncover a scheme that casts a new light on Rachel’s death and threatens the whole village, they find themselves in the firing line.

I’ve read the first two in Tana French’s Cal Hooper series, The Searcher and The Hunter, so I was really keen to read her third, The Keeper. They are all excellent books.

This one completes the Cal Hooper trilogy continuing the story of retired Chicago police officer Cal, his fiancée Lena, teenager Trey Reddy, who is now sixteen, and the rest of the people living in Ardnakelty, a fictional, remote village in Western Ireland. Like the first two books The Keeper begins slowly, but I like the slow build up to the mystery, and I love Tana French’s beautiful descriptions of the Irish rural landscape and her characterisation. I really felt that over the course of the trilogy I have got to know the characters – they come over as real people and I felt for all of them as this story developed.

It’s focused on the death of Rachel Holohan, was it murder or suicide, as her fiancé’s father would have us believe? I’m not going to write in any more detail about the plot other than to say that from the slow start the pace picks up, the tension rises and the twists and turns all make this an impressive and convincing murder mystery. I loved it and only hope that Tana French will write more books about Cal and the others as I’d love to know what happens next.

Tana French has won several awards including the Edgar, Anthony, Macavity and Barry Awards, the Los Angeles Times Award for Best Mystery/Thriller, and the Irish Book Award for Crime Fiction.

As well as the Cal Hooper trilogy, she has written a standalone novel, The Wych Elm and six books that form The Dublin Squad series:

In the Woods (2006)
The Likeness (2008)
Faithful Place (2010)
Broken Harbour (2012)
The Secret Place (2014)
The Trespasser (2016

Many thanks to the author and Penguin for a review copy via NetGalley.

5 thoughts on “The Keeper by Tana French

  1. I’m so glad you enjoyed this, Margaret. I really like the way Tana French writes, and I agree she has a way of building up tension. She does do beautiful descriptions of Ireland, too, as you say. Even if she doesn’t continue Cal Hooper’s story, I’m sure that whatever she does next will be good.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. I agree, Margot – I’ll be watching out to see what her next book will be. But in the meantime I still have most of The Dublin Squad books left to read, so I’ve plenty to go on with.

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  2. I was on a serious Tana French binge a few years ago, having read most of the Dublin Squad series, and then I tried to read The Wych Elm. It totally freaked me out, and I couldn’t even finish it and haven’t read a French novel since then. However, I have The Trespasser waiting on my TBR shelf, so maybe soon…

    Anyway, your post has got me itching to return to the Ireland via Tana French, and if I have the nerve, I may go on to the Cal Hooper series. I seriously love the setting!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. I know what you mean about The Wych Elm. I found it an intense, nuanced book, with several complex layers. It’s full of mystery and suspense about a family in crisis and I thoroughly enjoyed it, but I can see how it would have freaked you out.

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  3. Margaret, I’m glad to hear your thoughts on this latest book by Tana French. I have read all her Dublin Murder Squad books and then also read (and didn’t like) The Witch Elm. I have not read any of her Cal Hooper books, but your thoughts encourage me to do that. And now that there are 3 of them, I should get going. ;-)

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