

Both the scenes on the coast, where Matthew Venn lives and where the murder took place, as well as the scenes at the police station in Barnstable. The setting of “ The Long Call” was well described. In his late twenties, Ross is competitive, brash, and happily married, Ross is the DCI’s golden boy so Matthew Venn feels he must tread carefully around him. Matthew disapproves of her life choices – yet feels she is the best detective he has ever worked with.Īlso prominently featured was DC Ross May. Because she married young, she is now making up for lost time. Escaped from an abusive marriage, Jen is the single mother of two teenagers. Matthew Venn’s team were an interesting bunch, especially the flamboyant DS Jen Rafferty who is at constant battle with her work/life imbalance. His relationship with his parents was a troubled one, and he carries that around as baggage. James’ Inspector Dalgliesh, except for the fact that Venn is gay. The protagonist this time out is quite unlike other police inspectors in that he is soft-spoken, solitary, introspective, fastidious, and… he is married to another man. When I learned that her latest book was the beginning of yet another series, I couldn’t wait to read it. I first encountered the work of Ann Cleeves when I read the first novel in her Shetland series some years ago.


“We all need secrets, just to keep sane, to feel that the world doesn’t own us.” Why do all the connections seem to lead back to the Woodyard? One of the volunteer workers was murdered, and now one of the vulnerable adults who attends the Woodyard’s Day Center is missing. Problematic perhaps for Matthew who wonders if his perusing the case will be seen as a conflict of interest due to the fact that various crimes seem to be connected to the Woodyard in some way. Jonathan is the manager of the Woodyard, a community center that houses a cafe, instructs adult learning classes, and runs a day center for mentally challenged adults. Yet another reason for his mother to disapprove of him… Now he has returned to the area for work, and he is newly (and very happily) married to Jonathan. Strictly religious, and members of a puritan-like ‘Brethren’ community, they shunned Matthew for his opposing religious views. He has been estranged from his parents for years. These were the noises of home.”ĭetective Matthew Venn has just returned to the place where he grew up. “Now he could hear the surf on the beach and the cry of a herring gull, the sound naturalists named the long call, the cry which always sounded to him like an inarticulate howl of pain. The first novel in a new series which introduces Detective Matthew Venn.
