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Reviews: The
Independent
Hot News from a Cold Case
Minette Walters has made her name with a successful modern
brand of Country House Gothic, but she is too complex a writer merely
to continue the formula of horrific goings-on among the gentry, and has
been alternating it with original and experimental crime writing.
Disordered Minds takes a long, hard look at the disrupted
lives of the victims of prejudice and abuse: Urban Estate Gothic, perhaps,
but given a certain realism by an interesting form of factoid fiction
that Walters has used in previous books. The setting is the south coast
in the Poole- Bournemouth area, home to one of the wealthiest communities
Europe, but also to extreme social deprivation.
There is a "cold case" at the heart of the book, the brutal
murder, some 30 years previously, of an old woman who was battered to
death in her home. This was apparently carried out by an abnormal grandson
who committed suicide after being bullied in prison. The case is re-opened
by Dr Jonathan Hughes, an anthropologist of mixed-race background who
understands from his own experience what prejudice is like, and believes
that the boy was wrongly convicted. Disordered Minds
is in fact a book-within-a-book: Hughes's own work arguing the case for
wrongful conviction, a section of which is "reproduced" at the
start of Walters' novel. It's an economical way of introducing us to the
facts of the murder.
Walters has always shunned the conventional police-series characters.
Here she introduces two main personalities involved in collecting evidence.
Jonathan Hughes goes further than understanding prejudice: he knows what
it is to experience bullying and is forced to recognise within himself
the deep shame of cowardice. He joins forces with an unlikely ally, a
plump and jolly local councillor, who also believes that the grandson
was innocent.
Together, they express the theme, so often found in Walters' work, of
deep anger against injustice and determination to do something about it.
These two dive into the case, and the story they uncover is told partly
in the form of letters, newspaper cuttings and emails that have the unsettling
effect of hovering between fact and fiction.
At the heart of the crime were brutal episodes of gang rape and widespread
parental abuse that went undetected at the time. How was the death of
the old lady connected with a group of young teenagers: was one of the
girls really raped, and if so what effect did it have on their lives?
The child, Cilla, barely in her teens at the time of the multiple rape,
seemed to have vanished. Was she, too, a murder victim, or has she survived
under a false identity?
A mystery woman appears in different guises and the twists of the story
also trace the life of the rape victim's "best friend" who witnessed
the scene. The enquiry builds up into a fascinating portrait of a psychopathic
personality as it emerges from a brutal and perverted background.
Walters is unsparing in giving us graphic details of the sexual cruelties
perpetrated by both adults and children and the consequences that result,
including a dreadful dependency created in the victims. The book gives
a solution to the murder mystery, but it takes a long, cold look at humanity:
even the most sympathetic characters are not exempt from Walters' clear-sighted
eye and there are no easy answers.
--Jane
Jakeman
This review first appeared in The Independent on Friday 14 Nov. 2003. |
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