123 reviews for:

Fever of the Bone

Val McDermid

3.91 AVERAGE


Val McDermid consistently delivers a great thrill ride! I enjoy the unfolding of her quirky characters. These books are always a little twisted and often grisly so not a great choice for the squeamish.

I always enjoy Val McDermid's mysteries featuring Hill and Jordan. These troubled and tormented characters have wormed their way into my heart. This one delivers and brings back a favorite villain!

The Carol/Tony dynamic is a bit overwrought. Perhaps if I read these more in order it’d make more sense.

The crime herein is outlandish but clever.

Least favorite entry in the series so far. Not a terrible book. Well written and plotted for the most part. It’s just that Tony and Carol’s relationship is ultimately juvenile and sad. And how many serial killers can one midlands city have stalking its sex workers?

Forgotten how much I enjoy Val McDermid books
challenging dark reflective tense medium-paced
Plot or Character Driven: A mix
Strong character development: Yes
Loveable characters: No
Diverse cast of characters: Yes
Flaws of characters a main focus: Complicated

Val McDermid has written some cracking serial killer thrillers (The Mermaids Singing, Killing The Shadows), and the other books in this series have been good. But this sixth installment is sadly just another bog standard, plodding police procedural, and it bored me rigid.

Carol Jordan's squad has a new boss, and he doesn't want them spending money on profiler Tony Hill, so they're forced to go it alone when a couple of teenage boys turn up dead with their genitals removed. As for Tony, he's consulting on a case in which a teenage girl has had her genitals mutilated.

It takes more than 300 pages for the detectives to even connect these crimes.

Most of this book is actually concerned with Tony Hill reconnecting with the father he never knew, who has died and left Tony with some considerable wealth. Carol Jordan spends a great deal of time investigating and uncovering the life of Tony's father to help him out. Time that she could have spent on her murder inquiry, you know? No wonder it takes so long for them to connect all the deaths.

Events are padded out with a completely pointless, unrelated subplot involving a cold case of a woman and her missing child. Why was this even here?

My other pet hate was that tropetastic police procedural norm of learning all about the life and thoughts of a character, who exists merely to discover a dead body, who is then never heard from again! Padding out the word count or what? It's so pointless!

McDermid is better than her peers in regards to showing rather than telling when it comes to her characters and what they're good at. The book is well-written. Tony and Carol have a complex, strange, yet oddly believable relationship.

But that's all for naught when there's so little on offer. The plot moves at a snail's pace, one subplot is completely pointless, and the other seems to be of as much focus as the actual serial killings themselves. There are no real suspects in the crimes, and zero red herrings, so there's no fun in trying to pick out the killer yourself or trying to tie it all together yourself. The characters just blather around for 400 pages until someone uncovers a vital clue. I had absolutely zero stakes in anything that happened here.

Feverishly dull.

I am reading the Tony Hill books in order and have been gripped from the first paragraph with each book. read this in a week and safe to say it didn't disappoint. on to the next...
adventurous challenging dark informative mysterious medium-paced
Plot or Character Driven: Plot
Strong character development: Yes
Loveable characters: No
Diverse cast of characters: No
Flaws of characters a main focus: Yes

Val McDermid is the author of an excellent series featuring Tony Hill, a troubled profiler. In Fever of the Bone, someone is luring teenagers over the Internet and murdering them. As usual with a McDermid novel,the book introduces interesting characters and has an involving plot.

See my complete review here:

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