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6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Pregnant Questions
While this standalone novel departs from the excellent Tom Thorne series written by Mark Billingham, apparently he couldn't resist including his favorite protagonist in a cameo role. In this story, however, we are introduced to a whole new set of characters including Helen, a very pregnant policewoman, days away from giving birth.

Helen's significant other...
Published on December 9, 2008 by Ted Feit

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1 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Disappointing!
This is a stand alone book (although Tom Thorne appears very fleetingly). it feels like a very quickly written book with several stories crossing each other without apparent logic, superficial characters and unrealistic situations. I was bored and had difficulties to finish the book. definitely not the quality I expected from Mr Billingham!
Published 18 months ago by Dominique Nientker


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6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Pregnant Questions, December 9, 2008
By 
Ted Feit (Long Beach, NY USA) - See all my reviews
(VINE VOICE)   
This review is from: In the Dark: A Novel (Hardcover)
While this standalone novel departs from the excellent Tom Thorne series written by Mark Billingham, apparently he couldn't resist including his favorite protagonist in a cameo role. In this story, however, we are introduced to a whole new set of characters including Helen, a very pregnant policewoman, days away from giving birth.

Helen's significant other also is on the job. He is killed while on an apparent drug gang initiation, during which a new member shoots at a car that has flashed its headlights at the one in which he is a passenger. As a result, the victim's auto swerves into a bus stop smashing into Helen's mate and killing him. Helen then begins to look into her partner's recent activities, and to wonder whether he was on the take. Despite her swollen belly, Helen undertakes an investigation of her own, leading to all kinds of ramifications.

The graphic descriptions of drug culture and the kids involved in the operations are matched only by the intricacy of the plotting. There is more than one twist when the story takes another turn. The novel is as well-written as anything the author has done, and highly recommended.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Get ready for a surprise at the end, April 19, 2009
This review is from: In the Dark: A Novel (Hardcover)
Billingham's first stand alone novel begins with five teenagers riding in a car, seemingly looking for a target to shoot in a gang initiation.

A woman sees their car without the lights and flicks hers, not knowing that this is the manner in which victims are chosen. Shots are fired into the car, the car swerves and crashes into a bus stop killing off duty police officer, Paul Hopwood.

Paul's girlfriend, Helen Weeks, is also a police officer. Their child is almost due and Helen decides that the manner in which she can deal with her grief is to find the answers and perpetrators of Paul's killing.

Besides Helen's investigation, the police are seeking the car and driver who killed one of their own. Additionally Frank Linnell,an underworld figure who believes that Paul was a friend, is in persuit of the killers. This group has resources that the police do not.

This is an intelligent story that is told from three points of view, Helen's, Frank's and the guilt ridden teenager who reluctantly did the shooting.

As members of the gang are found and things happen to them, Billingham lets the reader see the social pressures that force teenagers into joining gangs and the reprecussions that can change their lives.

The plot driven story is well done and seems to be headed to a logical conclusion when Billingham pulls a surprise that no one could have forseen.

The writer continues to impress.

Recommended.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Thorne is better but this is ok., November 25, 2010
By 
Peter (Melbourne Australia) - See all my reviews
Mark Billingham is the creator of the likable character Tom Thorne, he has written 9 books featuring Thorne and has developed a strong following of fans who avidly read his work.

In The Dark is his first standalone novel and it is a very good addition to the bookshelves.

Helen is pregnant, due in a fortnight or so, when she finds out that her husband was killed in an accident when a group of young gang members shot at a passing car, causing the driver to swerve into Helen's husband killing him.

Although heavily pregnant, Helen (a police officer) decides to investigate the death. The combination of the crime investigation with the pregnancy is different.

Is the book as good as a Thorne? Probably not but that could be because I am so fond of the Thorne series and it is much easier to get into a book which part of a series than a standalone.

I would recommend this book if it is your first Billingham as you would get the feel for his style of writing but the Thorne series is even better.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Very, very British, but well worth any crime fiction reader's attention, January 30, 2010
I hyave just discovered Mark Billingham and have read his first (SLEEPYHEAD) and his most recent (DEATH MESSAGE) Tom Thorne novels along with this, his first stand alone (although Tom Thorne does make a couple of cameo appearances) novels and he has already reached the top echelon of my favorite author list. I do find flaws in his books, but the skill, the characterization, the plotting each compel me to read more of his work.Actually, I would like to encounter Helen Weeks, the main character here, in a sequel. Do be prepared for the very British dialogue, but also do read this author's work for yourself. I'm sure you'll be glad that you did. Even those like myself who have never ventured beyond the U.S. borders will find themselves immersed in the London atmosphere.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Gripping thriller ..., January 16, 2010
This is a gripping thriller that is very difficult to put down. The book tells the story of a death that appears to be one thing (a gang initiation shooting), but is something else altogether. The author is not afraid to humanize all of his characters - from Helen, the pregnant cop trying to solve the mystery of her fiance's murder to Theo, a gangbanger who might decide to change his life. The characters and situations were compelling and readable and I empathized with just about all of them, even though all of them were full of flaws.

This is the first stand-alone from an author who writes a police inspector series that I haven't read. I'm going to have to go find his other books since many readers say they're better than this one and I really enjoyed this one. If you're looking for a thriller that will keep you entertained and turning pages, this is a good one.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Very engrossing, October 31, 2009
By 
I can be very, very picky about my thrillers! It has to actually "thrill" me and engross me. Apparently, this is a challenge for many authors working in the genre - fortunately, it is not a problem for author Mark Billingham.

Billingham's stuff is always, always kind of dark and dangerous - he has a wonderful way of telling the story - without making it sound corny or over the top, at the same time, creating a complext plot and highly interesting and flawed characters. In the Dark is exactly this type of novel - I loved it from beginning to end.

Featuring a new and highly interesting personality - Helen, who is a cop and a very pregnant one at that, made this whole story engrossing and intriguing for me.

She is soon to give birth, but as fate would have it, her fellow cop and "special person" is shot in an apparently gang/drug related murder. Helen is desperate to find out what happened, especially since it looks as though he may have been "on the take". She needs to know.

What really makes this novel work for me is the pace of the storytelling, but also the intelligence of the main character, who is never, ever portrayed as a victim.

I loved this thriller and I suggest for anyone who likes to read "smart" books.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Easy to relate to everyday London news, September 29, 2009
By 
Lance Mitchell (Hampshire, UK, Northern Hemisphere, Planet Earth) - See all my reviews
Violent criminals, big and small; some of them teenagers believing that they are much bigger than they actually are. London police, some straight and some crooked. This book contains non-stop action from the beginning, and the reader is continually trying to separate the good guys from the bad.

It is easy to imagine that these are the sorts of events that are happening across London today. It certainly seems so from the news bulletins that I listen to, anyway.

The reality will grip your attention, but you'll need to accept the bad language as part of that reality.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A step --- actually, several steps --- beyond Billingham's previous work, addictive as those worthy volumes are and remain, January 26, 2009
By 
Bookreporter (New York, New York) - See all my reviews
This review is from: In the Dark: A Novel (Hardcover)
There is always a leap of faith that takes place when an author known for a particular series publishes an independent work standing outside of the mythos he or she has created. The author is treading on unfamiliar ground, taking a chance on new characters and situations. The readership comes to the author's new book with some built-in expectations to overcome before they get down to the business of reading, and hopefully enjoying, the new title.

So we come to Mark Billingham and IN THE DARK. Billingham is known as a major talent in several artistic disciplines, chief among them as the author of the Tom Thorne police procedural novels. His latest is not entirely outside of Thorne's world; set in London, Thorne appears very briefly, though he hardly plays a pivotal role. The book takes Billingham and the reader deeper into the heart of darkness than he has previously --- and, not incidentally, to heretofore unrevealed depths of his talent.

Set in London, IN THE DARK proceeds smartly along three tracks. The first is Helen Weeks, a very pregnant police officer on maternity leave who is within days of giving birth to her baby. The second is Theo, known on the street as "T," a basically well-intentioned teenager who is caught between trying to build a decent life with his girlfriend and child, and his membership in a drug-dealing gang in his estate (project) building. The third is Frank Linnell, an enigmatic gangster who, as events eventually reveal, is not quite all there. The collective nexus of these three individuals is the tragic death of Paul Hopwood. Hopwood is a British police officer who is the live-in boyfriend of Weeks, the unlikely pal of Linnell, and the victim of a horrific car accident that has its origins in the machinations of a gang initiation involving T.

Hopwood's death sets off two chain reactions that move in opposite directions. The police, having a vested interest in the death of one of their own, begin an investigation that is hamstrung procedurally by legal issues. Weeks takes advantage of her nebulous status --- a police officer, but officially on leave --- to pursue her own investigation that is unofficial but effective. Weeks had suspected, prior to Hopwood's death, that he was involved in activities on a personal or professional basis --- or both --- that he was hiding from her and his superiors.

Meanwhile, Linnell pursues an investigation that is frighteningly and brutally single-minded. He is motivated by nothing more basic than revenge and pursues it with a swift, terrible and effective bend. T gradually becomes aware that someone --- namely Linnell --- is systematically hunting down the gang members involved in the chain reaction that led to Hopwood's untimely end. It is Weeks's own dogged pursuit that challenges the conclusions that everyone, including herself, T and Linnell had reached, with results that are tragic on several levels.

IN THE DARK is a step --- actually, several steps --- beyond Billingham's previous work, addictive as those worthy volumes are and remain. If you have read Billingham before, IN THE DARK will solidify your loyalty. If this is your first taste, you will next turn to the feast of his Thorne novels, which should be savored slowly and re-read.

--- Reviewed by Joe Hartlaub
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3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Billingham fans will be happy, November 3, 2008
By 
This review is from: In the Dark: A Novel (Hardcover)
A pregnant woman, Helen Weeks, searches for the truth behind the death of Paul Hopwood, her lover and father of her child. Paul, a police officer, was killed while waiting for a bus. Helen is on leave from the Metropolitan police while awaiting the birth of her child.

Theo Shirley, a.k.a. T, is a young man with a girlfriend and a baby. When he joins up with a gang, he is forced to go through an initiation. The initiation involved shooting at a moving car. This shooting resulted in the car going out of control and running down Paul Hopwood.

While Helen is trying to cope with her pregnancy and being alone, she is not giving up on her investigation. She has heard and seen things that make her believe that Paul hadn't been completely honest with her as far as his work and what had been happening in his life prior to his death. Helen feels that she must uncover these secrets. Her investigation puts her in touch with people that she did not even know Paul associated with. Frank Linnell is a nice man but his business is not legal. Frank is grieving for Paul, but won't reveal any details about his relationship with Paul.

While Helen is trying to investigate the accident, T is trying his best to figure out what his next step in life is going to be. Members of his gang are being killed-and these same members were also in the car when shots were fired at the moving vehicle that went out of control.

In the Dark will keep you on the edge of your chair through the entire book. Billingham has written a very complex thriller. I've read a number of Mark Billingham's novels and enjoyed them all-but this one just left something to be desired, as far as I am concerned. I gave In The Dark a rating of a 4 rather than a 5 is that I was confused about one portion of the book-and I did come to a conclusion but I don't know if it is the right conclusion.

Armchair Interviews says: Billingham fans will be most happy.
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2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Delicious Thriller, April 21, 2010
By 
Beth Saboori (Santa Monica, California) - See all my reviews
(VINE VOICE)    (REAL NAME)   
It's a hot August night, not the kind Neil Diamond was singing about, when seventeen-year-old Theo Shirley, a wannabe gangbanger looking to make his bones, fires a shot into a moving car. The car careens into a busstop, killing Detective Sgt. Paul Hopwood. Hopwood's girlfriend is also a copper, Detective Constable Helen Weeks. She's also very pregnant.

Weeks refuses to believe it was an accident, he was a police officer after all. So she starts investigating and she finds out more then she bargained for. Corruption and violence and not all of it gang related. Some of it a little too close for comfort.

This story is told from several different viewpoints and I enjoyed being able to sympathize with characters, who I otherwise would not have. Especially the gangbanger shooter, who has both a girlfriend and a child at home. Usually gang guys are stereotypical cardboard characters, who we are programed to dislike right from the start. Mr. Bellingham brought all of the characters in this book, including the not so savory ones, to life for me. Also, I fell for some of the red herrings and the plot twists are just too delicious to mention. This is a very good thriller.
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In the Dark: A Novel
In the Dark: A Novel by Mark Billingham (Audio CD - January 19, 2009)
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