avatarDiane Wordsworth

Summary

Diane Wordsworth provides a five-star review of "Broken Angels" by Gwyn Bennett, praising its dark themes, character development, and dual mystery plot, despite some reservations about certain storylines and narrative techniques.

Abstract

In her review, Diane Wordsworth expresses gratitude for the opportunity to read an advance copy of "Broken Angels" by Gwyn Bennett. She commends the novel for its compelling storyline and the depth of its characters, particularly noting the realistic portrayal of the impact of investigative work on the detectives involved. The book is set in a contemporary London and deals with challenging subjects, which Wordsworth finds engaging. Although she has minor criticisms regarding a side story and occasional shifts in point of view

book review

Book Review: Broken Angels

⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️

Image created in CanvaPro by Diane Wordsworth

Many thanks to NetGalley and to Storm Publishing for letting me see an advance reader’s copy of Broken Angels by Gwyn Bennett.

DCI Barker and her team have a particularly grisly case on their hands, a case that involves children. And as if that isn’t harrowing enough, some of her team are also battling their own demons.

Broken Angels is the first in a series by Gwyn Bennett, and it’s one I for one will certainly be going back to.

Set in London, it’s a dark story that addresses dark issues and it goes a long way to also show how the case affects those investigating. I really liked the contemporary setting and the modern feel, and I liked the dual mystery element — the one they’re all looking into *and* the one that directly affects one member of the team in particular.

I did feel that the Jack storyline went a bit off-topic and didn’t really have anything to do with the main story and that perhaps it was a bit of an author soapbox subject. But the Harrison storyline, I thought, did impact the main investigation because his experiences made him the investigator he is.

I wasn’t keen on the occasional head-hopping either, where we suddenly switched viewpoint character mid-scene and back again. It didn’t happen often enough for it to work, for me. And I’m old-school anyway in that I prefer to stay with one character at a time.

All of this was balanced out, though, by the excellent overall story and the great characters the author has created.

Gwyn Bennett has a new fan.

Five stars.

⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️

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This review is © Diane Wordsworth. Originally published at https://www.dianewordsworth.com on 20 June 2023.

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