Title: HOUSE OF CORRECTION
Author: Nicci French
Publisher: Simon & Schuster Australia
Read: August 2020
Expected publication: 2 September 2020
My Rating: 🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟 all the stars!
Book Description:
Tabitha is accused of murder. She is in prison awaiting trial. There is a strong case against her, and she can’t remember what happened on December 21st.
She is alone, frightened and confused.
But somehow, from the confines of her cell, she needs to prove everyone wrong.
House of Correction is beautifully written, clever, shocking, twisty, so believable and utterly compelling. This is another stunningly brilliant novel to relish from Nicci French.
What attracted me to this book:
I have been a huge fan of the Nicci
French duo ever since picking up THE SAFE HOUSE a couple of decades ago. Ever
since then, I have greedily devoured everything they have written, and have
never been disappointed. I was beyond excited to get the opportunity to review
an ARC of their latest novel, HOUSE OF CORRECTION, and am happy to report that
the winning streak is continuing!
My musings:
If you mourned the end of the Frieda Klein series
as much as I did, then you will be happy to hear that Tabitha, the protagonist
of French’s new book, has been created in the same mould as Frieda. Tabitha is
a loner, she has no filter between her brain and her mouth, she is prickly and
a bit of a loner and whilst Frieda walks for hours to clear her head, Tabitha
prefers a swim in the icy ocean. Having returned to her old hometown, which
holds few good memories for her, Tabitha still finds herself an outsider,
shunned by most of the villagers. So it’s not a big stretch for them to
immediately point the finger at her when one of the village’s stalwarts is
found brutally murdered, his body disposed of in Tabitha’s garden shed. The
police are more than happy to agree that Tabitha not only had the opportunity
and means, but also a motive for the murder. Even her own solicitor doesn’t
believe her when she proclaims her innocence. So Tabitha does the unthinkable –
she fires her solicitor and plans on defending herself in the murder trial. She
has only a few weeks to find enough evidence to clear her name – from her
prison cell.
I’m not sure what exactly it is
about French’s writing that perfectly hits the mark for me, but as soon as I
started reading I knew that this was going to be another winner for me. With
its claustrophobic small town setting and cast of characters who all seem to
have something to hide, the clock was ticking for Tabitha to find a way to
break out of jail. On the day of Robert Rees’ murder, the village had been cut
off from civilisation by a fallen tree, narrowing the cast of characters to the
ones who had been trapped in town. This gave the book an old-fashioned closed
door mystery feel I loved! As Tabitha discovers evidence, one clue at a time, I
was not only cheering her on but felt as if I was playing detective with her. I
love books where I am just as much in the dark as the main character – someone
I am not even sure I fully trust. The stage thus set, I settled in for the
ride.
Again, the French team have created
a mysterious, aloof and yet compelling protagonist who may even keep her
readers at arms’ length, and yet still wormed her way into my heart. Perhaps
you will find Tabitha unlikeable and prickly, but I bet you will fight in her
corner, even though one small part of you will suspect that she is not telling
the full truth. Is she? That’s something you will have to find out for
yourself.
Summary:
All in all, with HOUSE OF CORRECTION, the French
writing duo have continued their winning streak for me. Perhaps it was the
claustrophobic setting, or the ticking clock, or the closed-door mystery style
writing, but I sat up all night reading and don’t hesitate giving it a full
five stars. It’s a book that will appeal to readers who enjoy a slow burning, character
driven mystery that slowly unfolds, clue by clue, keeping you guessing until
the end. I can’t wait to find out what the duo will come up with next!
Thank
you to Netgalley and Simon & Schuster Australia for the free electronic copy of this
novel and for giving me the opportunity to provide an honest review.
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