From gritty London gangland to mysterious Gallic whimsy, Laura Wilson rounds up the best recent crime releases
A Death at the Palace ... Alexandra Palace in north London. Photograph: Richard Saker
A Death at the Palace (Old Street, £8.99) is set in and around Wood Green, a largely unloved and often overlooked corner of north London colonised by successive waves of immigrants who rub along with varying degrees of success. Through its cosmopolitan streets limps Rex Tracey, a journalist who "would be forty before his Oystercard needed its next top-up", and who has fallen from the heights of Fleet Street to working for the local rag, where he spends his time necking Polish beer and investigating an anti-immigration group. When the body of his Lithuanian ex-girlfriend Milda is discovered, he becomes a murder suspect and is forced into some detective work of his own. Meanwhile, retired chiropodist and camera buff Arthur Chapman lives a life of quiet desperation, caring for his dying wife and struggling to keep the demons of his past at bay… With an appealing protagonist, a cast of vivid characters and a powerful sense of place, this is an excellent crime novel as well as a sharply observed slice of contemporary London life – and the good news is that it promises to be the first in a series.
Set a couple of miles to the east, in an equally well-rendered Hackney, Russ Litten's second novel, Swear Down (Tindal Street, £12.99), features fast-tracked DS Peter Ndekwe, newly arrived from across the river. His boss wants him to wrap up the murder of gang leader Aaron Stewart, found stabbed on the Crown Heights estate, as soon as possible. There are, however, two confessions: one from Carlton McKenzie, a young black man with some history as a petty criminal, who is making a valiant attempt to get himself away from the gang culture that threatens to envelop him, and another from Jack Shepherdson, an ex‑merchant seaman with a fondness for betting and booze. Rather than the investigation itself or the character of Ndekwe, who seems oddly page-bound, it is the unlikely friendship between the two suspects that is the emotional core of Swear Down – subtle, moving and disturbing.
At 631 pages, The Deliverance of Evil by Italian Roberto Costantini (Quercus, £14.99, translated by NS Thompson) would have benefited from some trimming, but this sprawling tale of personal and political corruption, expediency and revenge engages, despite the sometimes ponderous pace. Elisa Sordi is murdered in Rome during Italy's 1982 World Cup victory, and the case remains unsolved until Italy's 2006 triumph, when the killer strikes again. Costantini has created a fascinating protagonist, first seen as a thirtysomething womaniser with fascist sympathies, and then as an older, sadder and wiser man, bent on making amends for past mistakes.
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