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French sides with victim in ‘Witch Elm’

By CHRISTINA LEDBETTER, Associated Press
Published: October 21, 2018, 5:49am

By now we are accustomed to Tana French’s engrossing, eloquently written murder plots solved by the Dublin Murder Squad. This time, however, she’s left the police to work behind closed doors and introduces her first stand-alone novel, “The Witch Elm.”

We meet Toby on the night he’s brutally assaulted in his apartment. This is only the beginning of his problems as he soon finds himself disabled and living with his dying uncle, Hugo. Then a skull is found in the garden of the family home, bringing with it endless questions: To whom did it belong? How did it get there? What if Toby doesn’t know himself as well as he thought?

While past novels contained snarky, quick-witted characters, this book introduces French’s first bloke who properly demands at least a handful of spit-your-drink-out laughs. With that, Toby’s quips never fight for center stage. As always, mystery combined with characters worth caring about glide the story along. French burrows deeply into her victim’s psyche, plucking out his thoughts and presenting them with such elegantly worded descriptions one may think the author has nestled herself in an armchair in Toby’s frontal cortex.

The primary setting, Uncle Hugh’s ivy-covered house with its book-filled study, earthy garden brimming with plants and kitchen complete with casseroles and cousins serves the plot well. The home harbors history and secrets, perfect for a slow reveal.

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