Love Like Blood by Mark Billingham
Publisher: Self-Published
Genre: Contemporary, Mystery/Suspense/Thriller
Rating: 3 stars
Reviewed by FernIn Love Like Blood, DI Tom Thorne, “the next superstar detective,” teams up with perfectionist DI Nicola Tanner, the protagonist of Billingham’s acclaimed stand-alone thriller Die of Shame (Lee Child).
When her domestic partner Susan is brutally murdered, Nicola Tanner is convinced that she was the intended target. The murderer’s motive is likely connected to her recent work on a string of cold case honor killings. Despite being placed on leave, Tanner insists on pursuing justice for Susan—and she turns to fellow DI Tom Thorne for help.
Agreeing to take the case, Thorne quickly finds that working in such controversial territory among London’s Hindu, Muslim, and Sikh communities can be dangerous in more ways than one. But when a young Bangladeshi couple goes missing, Tanner and Thorne must put everything on the line to investigate a case that is anything but cold.
DI Tom Thorne is reluctantly drawn in by a fellow officer to what appears to be a series of contracted honour killings. The link is tenuous, but Nicola Tanner is convinced and – always one to play by the rules – her conviction sways Thorne. Tanner is up front by the reasons for her tenacity, but when another pair of young lovers go “missing” Thorne has to admit there seems to be something to Tanners theory. Can they work out what’s really happening?
While I absolutely have been enjoying this series I admit I find most of the books varying degrees of uncomfortable. The author has an amazing knack of taking difficult – if not taboo – circumstances and cantering his plot lines around it. I found this book – based around a pair of killers who hire themselves out to perform honour killings for families refusing to get their hands dirty – to be equal parts discomfortable and an excellently writer murder mystery.
Readers who enjoy a grittier – or even noir – style of British police procedural should definitely find this book appeals to them. I can also recommend the rest of the series as being along a similar line.
This is well into the DI Thorne series this book can absolutely be read and enjoyed as a standalone. Readers shouldn’t worry about not having read previous books, this one stands well by itself. Found it to be an excellent – if slightly uncomfortable- read and worth the emotional investment.















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