A review by mstall_
The Searcher by Tana French

mysterious slow-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? It's complicated
  • Loveable characters? It's complicated
  • Diverse cast of characters? No
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

3.25

The Searcher by Tana French was a book that I had picked up and put down at the bookstore about three times before I decided to finally buy it. I had heard great reviews of her other series Dublin Murder Squad and I figured since The Searcher was book one of a new series, I'd start here. Ultimately I was left wanting a bit more from the story, feeling a little bummed and a little duped.

Cal Hooper is a retired cop who, after a failed marriage and strained relationship with his daughter, decides to leave Chicago and move to remote Ireland to get some peace. Unfortunately for him peace has no interest in being got by Cal. As he acclimates to his new village, he befriends a young kid who seeks out Cal's help in finding his brother who has disappeared. Cal, the kid and the village itself set down a path that Cal isn't sure he can see the right ending to.

I can see why Tana French has authored so many books, her writing is top notch. The prose in The Searcher was the best part of this book - there was enough local language thrown in to remind me that I was in Ireland without it being unreadable. Tana was also able to write this book as if you were reading it from the lens of exhausted, tired cop without needing to write it in first person. Pretty genius if you ask me.

The story, however, was lacking the big BANG moment I know and love from mystery/crime books. The book meanders through the first half, building the setting, the relationships, and the narrative. While I was a little bored I figured it would pick up during the second half and unfortunately I was wrong. The climax of the story was more like an exhausted fart -- unimpressive in all ways. At the very start of the book I thought I knew what was going to happen/who did it but talked myself out of it because it couldn't be THAT obvious, right? Wrong. It was that obvious and a pretty substantial let down.

Now, to be fair, this is book one in a new series so maybe Tana was just really laying the backstory/foundation on thick in this book and future books will have better pacing/shock value. I am unlikely to finish out this series unless I read really stellar reviews of the next book first. I will also mention that I might have had a different experience if I read this book a few years down the line when I could have immediately jumped into book two. I will be giving her Dublin Murder Squad series a try since that series has phenomenal reviews.

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