Tuesday, December 21, 2010

The Reluctant Detective - Martha Ockley

I love a good clerical mystery & I’ve found a new author to follow. The Reluctant Detective is the first book in a new series by Martha Ockley, a new author to me. This book is in the tradition of my favourite clerical mystery authors, Kate Charles & D M Greenwood with a touch of Dorothy L Sayers & Agatha Christie.

Faith Morgan is a woman in her 30s, recently ordained after a career in the police force that became unsatisfying once she felt a vocation for the Church. As well as a career, Faith also left behind a serious relationship with Detective Inspector Ben Shorter. Faith has been working in an inner-city parish but is interested in moving to a rural parish. Little Worthy is a quiet village near Winchester. Faith knows the village from childhood holidays & is feeling a little nostalgic as she arrives on a Sunday morning just before the service begins. Her hopes of remaining anonymous are immediately dashed by the beady eyes of churchwarden, Pat Montesque, who catches the glint of her cross on the collar of her dress & moves in to find out everything about Faith in ten minutes or less. The incumbent, Alistair Ingram, is about to retire because of ill-health & the parish of St James’s would be a new challenge for Faith.

Faith’s nostalgic pleasure in the church is shattered when Alistair Ingram collapses & dies during Communion. Her police training takes over as she rushes to offer help but she soon realises that this may not be a simple death from a heart attack but something more sinister. Her instincts are correct. Ingram was poisoned. She’s disconcerted but not surprised when Ben Shorter arrives to head the investigation team. Their relationship foundered on his inability to understand her vocation & also his involvement in another case that went wrong. The details of this case are unclear but Ben obviously disappointed Faith in his handling of a vulnerable suspect & their relationship never recovered.

Faith is asked to fill in as Vicar of St James’s until a new incumbent is appointed & she finds herself becoming more & more involved with the parish & her new parishioners. She can’t stop herself doing a little investigating. Could the answer lie in Ingram’s past life as a financial consultant? In his spiky relationship with his son, Don? In his relationship with a divorced parishioner? Or was the dispute with a neighbouring farmer over a piece of land enough to push the farmer, a troubled loner, over the edge? There are lots of motives & suspects to mull over, maybe too many, & I picked up enough clues to work out the murderer, but it didn’t matter. I loved this book. I read it in an afternoon. I loved the atmosphere of the rural parish, the characters of the other clergy, including a particularly unpleasant press officer & Faith’s mentor, Canon Jonathan, who makes a brief appearance.

Faith herself is a character I’m looking forward to meeting again. She's still finding her way in her new life but she has a genuine desire to make a difference & be a spiritual guide to her parishioners. Her relationship with Ben is still smouldering & it will be interesting to see where Ockley takes them in the next book in the series. Martha Ockley is the pen name of Rebecca Jenkins who has a website here. She has written a series of Regency mysteries as well as non-fiction. It’s no wonder that the clerical atmosphere & politics are spot-on as she’s the daughter of the Rt Revd David Jenkins, former Bishop of Durham.

7 comments:

  1. This looks good, Lynn. I'm adding it to TBR list for sure. I like this sort of thing myself. Do you know Julia Spencer Fleming's mysteries featuring another woman cleric? The books take place in a small town in upstate New York. The heroine, Clare, is not only a minister but she's ex-army lately called to her vocation. The first book in the series is: IN THE BLEAK MIDWINTER. The series is quite a few books along and is one of those that must be read in order. I love it and am waiting none too patiently for the latest book in the series ONE WAS A SOLDIER.

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  2. I've read a couple of the Julia S-F books but it was a while ago. I didn't realise the series was still going. Maybe I'll catch up with it again next year.

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  3. Thanks for the mention, Lyn! And for the recommendation of a new clerical series - I've now ordered it and look forward to reading it.
    Kate Charles

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  4. Kate, thank you for commenting. I've read & enjoyed all your books & I'm always on the lookout for clerical mysteries. I hope you enjoy it.

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  5. Lyn, I'll be happy to send you my list of clerical mysteries - quite a lengthy list, though lots of them are old and out of print. I was commissioned to do an article on clerical mysteries for the 'Church Times' a couple of years ago, and had numerous requests for my 'Corpses in the Cloister' list, so the word is being spread.

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  6. Kate, I'd love to have a copy of your list. I've just started another clerical mystery of sorts, Convent on Styx by Gladys Mitchell. I find nuns just as fascinating in mysteries as the clergy. I've emailed you through your website about the list.

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  7. Donna Fletcher Crow, "Monastery Murders" is what I just finished reading. Number 2 will be out soon. I will check for your books.

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