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The Risk of Darkness (Simon Serrailler Crime Novels)
 
 
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The Risk of Darkness (Simon Serrailler Crime Novels) [Hardcover]

Susan Hill (Author)
3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (21 customer reviews)

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Book Description

Simon Serrailler Crime Novels March 5, 2009
Simon Serailler is back in this pulse-pounding, wrenching novel of action, love and loss.

We met Simon Serailler first in The Various Haunts of Men and got to know him better in The Pure in Heart. Susan Hill is not afraid to tackle difficult themes, always prepared to face up to the dark realities in everyday lives-and even the terrors of the real world. Her third crime novel, The Risk of Darkness, perhaps even more compulsive and convincing than its predecessors, explores the crazy grief of a widowed husband, a derangement that turns into obsession and threats, violence and terror.

Meanwhile, handsome, introverted Simon Serrailler, whose cool reserve has broken the hearts of several women, finds his own heart troubled by the newest recruit to the Cathedral staff: a feisty female Anglican priest with red hair.

With the complexity and character study that got raves for The Pure in Heart, and with the relentless pacing and plot twists of The Various Haunts of Men, The Risk of Darkness is truly the work of a writer at the top of her form.


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Editorial Reviews

Review

Praise from the U.K. for The Risk of Darkness

"Crime fans on the look out for intelligent examples of the genre will enjoy The Risk of Darkness."-Time Out

"Of its sort The Risk of Darknessis an almost flawless novel." -Spectator

"This is a crime series that specialises in sidestepping conventions, always to exhilarating effect."-The Independent

"A page-turner. Watch out for the twist in the tail, it''ll take you by surprise." -Choice

"A compulsive and compelling story...packed with action and adventure." -At Home

About the Author

Susan Hill has won both the Whitbread and the Somerset Maugham Awards and been shortlisted for the Booker Prize. She wrote Mrs de Winter, the bestselling sequel to Rebecca, and the ghost story, The Woman in Black, which was adapted for the stage and has been runnning in London for 18 years. She lives in Gloucestershire, and runs a small publishing company of her own, Long Barn Books.

Product Details

  • Reading level: Ages 18 and up
  • Hardcover: 384 pages
  • Publisher: Overlook Hardcover; First U.S. Edition edition (March 5, 2009)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1585679275
  • ISBN-13: 978-1585679270
  • Product Dimensions: 9.2 x 6.1 x 1.2 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.4 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (21 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #424,148 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

21 Reviews
5 star:
 (8)
4 star:
 (6)
3 star:
 (3)
2 star:
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1 star:
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Average Customer Review
3.8 out of 5 stars (21 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

21 of 22 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Love British mystery?, July 12, 2008
This is the third book by Susan Hill that I have bought and read. While Simon may not be everyone's idea of a policeman, he is complicated,deep, and interesting. His family background and interaction with them are interesting and complex. This book finishes the story of the missing child begun in the 2nd book and begins changes in the family lives and relationships of Simon. If you have never read any books in this series, I would recommend you start with Various Haunts of Men and read in order.
I do like all of these books, even though they are a bit different.
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A worthy continuation of this series, May 5, 2009
This review is from: The Risk of Darkness (Simon Serrailler Crime Novels) (Hardcover)
What's up with authors named Hill? First we have the terrific Reginald Hill and now Susan Hill has another winner in what is becoming an increasingly complex series. After purchasing her first entry in the Simon Serrailler series, " The Various Haunts of Men" The Various Haunts of Men (Simon Serrailler Mystery), I couldn't wait so I checked out the second from the library! #3 lives up to its predecessors.

Hill manages to juggle several story lines at once without confusing the reader--no small accomplishment. Additionally, even her minor characters are distinctive, something only a masterful writer can achieve. Early on, we discover that the serial child murderer is a woman, thus overturning our expectations. To her credit, the author throws out all the various theories of why Ed does what she does but never lets her characters or her readers solve that mystery. The other murders in the novel follow the usual motives, though with twists, thus highlighting the main puzzle.

Hill's Simon irritates us just as he irritates his triplet, Cat, because he is such a doofus about women. But like Cat, we still love him. We do have to cheer when she finally figuratively grabs him by the throat and confronts him with his seeming callous treatment of the women in his life.

The darkness is all around, for character after character. So many losses and so many attempts to escape the risk of darkness--some successful, some potentially more than just an escape, and some truly horrifying. As she has done with each of the previous novels, Hill leaves us looking forward to Simon and the other main characters when #4 opens in her skillfully imagined English town, Lafferton.
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6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Risk of Darkness by Susan Hill, April 19, 2009
By 
Carolyn Carpenter (Richmond, Virginia) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: The Risk of Darkness (Simon Serrailler Crime Novels) (Hardcover)
THE RISK OF DARKNESS
By Susan Hill

The following contains some revelations about the plots of all three Simon Serrailler novels which might be considered spoilers.

The Risk of Darkness is a book about life changes and how people respond to them. Although classified as a crime novel, it is much more than that. The crime and the criminal are a focal point around which other plots move, but crime is a plot device. This is not a who-done-it.

The crime is the abduction and murder of children. The criminal, revealed early on in the book, is Edwina Sleightholme, who prefers to be called Ed, a complex character whose psychological makeup and motivation are not fully explored in this book, leaving this reader longing for more.

The Risk of Darkness is the third in the Simon Serrailler series by Susan Hill. The series is a progression in time, meaning that the reader who has read the first two in the series will better understand references to the past in this, the third.

There are several concurrent plot lines and themes in The Risk of Darkness. The exploration of how people respond to death is a central theme.

Two deaths continue to haunt Simon: the death of Freya Graffham, a woman he was developing feelings for in the first book of the series, The Various Haunts of Men; and the death of his sister Martha, which took place in the second book, The Pure in Heart. These unresolved grievings have Simon feeling dissatisfaction with both his work and his personal life.

Max Jameson's wife Lizzie dies an agonizing death. Max's grief drives him into insanity.

Jane Fitzroy's mother is murdered, and Jane begins to question her own commitment to her position as an Anglican priest. The death of Lizzie Jameson and Max's plunge into insanity also factor into Jane's turmoil.

Marilyn Angus responds to the death of her husband and the presumed death of her son David with a matter-of-factness approach to getting on with life, although this reaction crumbles in the end.

Richard Serrailler, father to Cat and Simon, handles the death of his wife Meriel with a surface calmness. One suspects, however, that he is suppressing his grief and it will come to the fore at some point in the future.

Other life changes are faced by characters in the book. Simon's sister, Cat, and her husband Chris contemplate a move to Australia as an antidote to Chris's dissatisfaction with his work as a doctor, what seems in his case to be a classic case of a mid-life crisis.

Simon is contemplating changes in his life and in his career. He seems at a crossroads, not sure which way to turn. Simon is approaching his 37th birthday and so he too may be in the midst of a mid-life crisis.

By the end of the book Ed has come to the realization that she will never again be free, and the reader is left wondering how she is going to deal with this realization.

Three women are assaulted in the course of the book, and each woman deals with the aftereffects of the assault differently.

Cat, also a doctor, is assaulted while on a nighttime home visit. She is shaken by the assault and begins to reevaluate her life.

Magda, who has been assaulted in her home in London, responds by reasserting her independence and insisting on returning to her home, where she is later murdered.

Jane, who is Magda's daughter, is also assaulted in her home in Lafferton and responds by reconsidering her commitment to her career as an Anglican priest.

Mother-daughter relationships are also explored in this book.

The relationship between Cat and her mother Meriel occupies little space in this novel, although their relationship has been explored in more detail in the two previous novels.

Jane and Magda are considered from the perspectives of their very different responses to being assaulted in their homes, as well as their conflict over Jane's calling to the priesthood.

Kyra is a young girl who has been befriended by her neighbor Ed. While the reader is privy to Ed's thoughts about Kyra being safe and thus not in danger of being abducted and murdered, we do not understand why this is so. Kyra shares some personality traits with Ed, and I was left wondering if the relationship between Kyra and her mother Natalie might be similar to Ed's childhood relationship with her mother Eileen.

The relationship between Edwina and Eileen is tantalizingly short on detail. We view their past through the selective memories of Eileen only.

When I read a book, one thing that plays a role in determining whether I like it or not is whether I care about the characters. I cared a lot about Simon and Freya Graffham in the first book of the series, The Various Haunts of Men, the ending of which I found shocking, probably contributing to my very strong anticipation for the second book. I am left at the end of The Risk of Darkness with a similar longing for the next book in the series. I want to know more about Ed, her past and how she responds to the realization that she will never be free again.

Edwina Sleightholme is viewed by Simon as the personification of evil. Yet Ed is not a one-dimensional character, and while I share Simon's revulsion at what she has done, I am left wanting to know more of what shaped her personality, how she came to do the things she did. I do hope Susan Hill gives us more about Ed in future novels.
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