A review by karteabooks
Ceremony of Innocence by Madeleine Bunting

4.0

 Another book that I would never have considered picking up if it wasn’t for the lovely people at @tandemcollectiveuk, who allowed me to be on the readalong for this with lots of other fellow bookish people. 
 
When a young Muslim woman goes missing, the trail leads to a quintessentially English family's tangled and dark connections with Empire, the Shah's Tehran, and modern Bahrain, in this evocative and page-turning novel. Neem has been investigating the secretive business of the wealthy Wilcox Smiths in Bahrain. When she goes missing, presumed dead, those close to her unravel a trail that leads back to the 1970s in Tehran where Martin Wilcox Smith began his career as a diplomat. Phoebe, Martin's enigmatic wife, is divided between her love of Neem and protecting her husband; Fauzia, Martin's daughter-in-law, is a reporter investigating British ties to the Middle East; and Kate, Martin's niece, is in a relationship with a Bahraini refugee who opens her eyes to Martin's corruption; together they are on a path of discovery into their family's secret past. A vivid and evocative story that travels between the Shah's Iran, modern Bahrain and the English countryside, Ceremony of Innocence explores one family's entanglement with Empire and the power wielded by the establishment, to uncover colonialism's legacy of moral compromises and corruption. 
 
I was completely taken in by this book, by its characters, the setting, and the sheer force of this book. It is one of my top books this year, and I have some amazing titles in that list! 
 
It’s a story that slowly pieces together, it’s a triple (!) timeline book that jumps from Tehran in 1969-70, before the Shah was deposed, onto England in 2012-13 and then to now. There are moments of intense drama, painfully so, mainly in the storyline involving Kate and Hussain. 
 
If I’m completely honest, I’m just not sure about the ending. I think I was expecting more as I think my expectation of the ending were slowly built up during the book. Although on reflection, maybe the unfinished business that results from cover-ups and unsolved (and resolved) mysteries are realistic in the world of political thrillers. 
 
Even though this is primarily a political thriller, I highly recommend this as it tackles so much more than just a missing woman.