October 11

The Lost Boy – Rachel Amphlett

Run. Don’t look back.

When a young teenager is stabbed to death at a busy fairground, Detective Mark Turpin is assigned the task of finding the boy’s killer.

But this was no random murder.

Mark knows the victim, and the man who ordered his death.

As he sifts through the young victim’s final days, he uncovers a powerful crime syndicate that will do anything to protect its interests.

Then tragedy strikes, and suddenly Mark isn’t just trying to solve a murder – he’s fighting for his own survival.

 

My thanks to Anne Cater at Random Things Blog Tours for the opportunity to join this leg of the tour for The Lost Boy.  I received a pre-publication review copy of The Lost Boy.

 

The Lost Boy is all about a police investigation, it is the work, detail, the interviews and chasing down leads. Turpin and his colleagues are driven to find the killer of a young teenager who arrived in town and never had the chance to leave.

The book opens with an instruction…”Run.”  Matthew Arkdale is scared, he is alone and he is desperately trying to keep hidden from someone that is chasing him. Matthew is at a fairground, trying to hide in the crowds and escape his pursuer but the man hunting him is relentless and isn’t giving up.

Sadly for young Matthew he is about to run out of options. A brief confrontation, a knife and the teenager becomes a victim of a deadly crime.

It isn’t long before Matthews body is discovered and for DS Mark Turpin, who had been attending the fair with his kids, it is the end of a fun evening and the start of an intense investigation which will see Mark and his loved ones put into terrible danger. You see, Mark recognises Matthew as their paths crossed in the past and he knows who wanted Matthew dead. Somewhere in the background is a ruthless criminal who puts his own interests ahead of everthing else and doesn’t think twice about ending a life to ensure his own ventures can continue.

From the moment Matthew Arkdale dies the story switches to Turpin and the police. It is their book now, the investigation is everything and the officers tasked with finding a murderer are our only focus. The murder of a child is a hugely challenging time for the police and Turpin and his colleagues are shown to struggle with their emotions while they conduct their investigations. It’s handled extremely effectively by Rachel Amphlett and raised my involvement in the story. Can we read too many crime novels (absolutely not) but we can be guilty of forgetting the consequence of each character’s death as we, as readers, become fixated on the lead characters and the solving of the crime. Keeping the emotion about the tragedy of a young life lost as a big issue for the investigative team was paramount to my enjoyment.

In terms of the investigation its-self, I was hooked. We learn every new discovery as the police do. We see interviews, we get new evidence and we even chase up the labs to get blood and chemical reviews back as quickly as possible. Readers get to feel they are part of the team. Total immersion in the invesigation and I loved that.

For Turpin, knowing the victim and the man who ordered Matthews death means he too is at risk. This is the third Mark Turpin book and in previous outings he gained minor celebrity status when journalists featured his involvement in a successful police operation. Now Turpin’s personal details are easily obtainable and when the wrong people know he is a father and can also work out where he lives it isn’t just Mark Turpin who is in danger, his children and his partner are too. The stakes are high and the price of failure even higher.

I flew through The Lost Boy in just a couple of sittings. Rachel Amphlett’s words flowed over me as I became engrossed in this murder story and I experienced that bite of disappointment when I reached the end of the story, knowing I could easily have read more.

 

The Lost Boy is available now in paperback and digital format and you can order a copy here: https://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/B096SJBTPZ/ref=dbs_a_def_rwt_bibl_vppi_i1

 

 

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