An audio book.
In 1968 a child, Lucy (3), goes missing from London. DI Jones (50+, male, single) and DC Marisa Young are sent to Weymouth to investigate. Liz, 27, a reporter and Marisa's flatmate, goes there too. A lead takes them to Tydeham, a village taken over by the Army in 1943 and never returned. Liz senses she's been there. She phones her father, a retired brigadeer, who says he's never been there. His wife is getting forgetful. There's a 1943 timeline in which we learn about the big house in the village being emptied, the artworks going into storage.
Liz stays while the others return to London. She meets James Bennington, who used to live in the big house and now lives in London. She recalls having seen someone being buried nearby. The police find a woman's skeleton there. Liz returns to London. Jones says 3 girls disappeared years ago - an early case of his. Marisa suggests that Liz might be one of them (an only child, Liz was born when her parents were in their 40s). Lucy's parents have blackmailable pasts - her father (actually stepfather) is rich and secretly gay. Her mother Susan used to live in a squat.
In a flashback we learn that one of the missing girls was an evacuee picked up by a man.
Liz and James become friends. James' mother killed herself. Liz visits her birthplace in Devon, which doesn't quite match her memories. She works out that Lucy's real mother was a friend of Susan - Lark. She finds Lark and Lucy just as Lark kills herself. She finds an evacuated girl. She discovers that Alice, a maid of her family, was somehow special - her mother? She confronts her father about it by phone. That night her mother dies of an overdose. Her father tells Liz that her mother accidentally killed Alice (the buried body) and that he administered the overdose. He doesn't say if he's Liz's biological father.
An enjoyable read. It sounds well researched. Did people "process" new emotional info back then? Maybe. She's lucky in her investigations, surprisingly certain about her hunches, and not shocked (or even affected) by the revelations about her past and parents.
Other reviews
- literarytreats (the book’s strength isn’t so much in the mysteries that its characters need to solve, but rather in the characters themselves and the world they inhabit)
- historywomanperspective ( I found Liz to be one of the most frustrating characters that I have ever read. She had no likable trait about her. ... The main problem I had most with her was that she had no sense of justice. I could not believe that she sided with those who had committed horrible deeds. She did not care about what was morally right. I hated the decisions that she made, and I greatly disliked her. ... I was really confused why there were no morals in the story. ... I was really disappointed in this book and could not believe it was written by a popular mystery writer. As for the mystery, it was very convoluted and all over the place. I also found it to be very unconvincing. ... Therefore, this was Mrs. Bowen’s worst novel that she has written.)