Dead Ground
(Washington Poe 4)
M.W. Craven

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A few months ago, I recommended M.W. Craven’s third entry in his Washington Poe series, The Curator. I said at the time that the reason I was posting the review so long after it had been published, was because I had forced myself to ration the pleasure – deferred gratification if you will.
This time I managed to force myself to ask for it for Christmas, rather than going out to buy it immediately, but as soon as the jolly, bearded fat bloke delivered it, I succumbed.
In this latest instalment, Sergeant Washington Poe and his brilliantly quirky side-kick, Tilly Bradshaw, are called to look into what appears to be a fairly mundane murder in a brothel. As members of the National Crime Agency specialising in serial murders and more unusual crimes, this doesn’t fit their usual remit. But their presence has been requested especially, by the sort of folks that like to keep things quiet.
Pretty soon it becomes apparent that the case is anything but routine. A highly-vetted victim doing a sensitive job, a strange ceramic rat left at the scene, and links to a peculiar bank heist three years previously all add up to a baffling investigation. For this, Craven draws on his own personal experiences, which lends the writing authenticity and the motives when they are revealed are clearly very important to him.
The mystery at the heart of this story would be a fantastic page-turner regardless, but what garners the books such acclaim is the wonderful relationship between Poe and Tilly, and Craven’s witty and often hilarious prose. This isn’t a comedy caper by any stretch, it’s a serious crime thriller, but one that still makes you laugh out loud.
Fans of the series will be delighted that previous story threads are continued, with ongoing repercussions from events that happened in previous novels, but newcomers will easily slip into the book with no problem. That being said, as I recommended in the review for The Curator, do yourself a favour and start at the beginning with The Puppet Show and Black Summer – the series as a whole is a joy and you won’t regret spending time getting to know the characters from the start of their journey.
This one comes heartily recommended, and was a cracking start to 2022.

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