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Book Reviews of Cold Granite

Cold Granite
Author: Stuart MacBride
ISBN: 193510
Publication Date: 2005
Pages: 458
Rating:
  • Currently 4/5 Stars.
 1

4 stars, based on 1 rating
Publisher: Harper Collins UK
Book Type: Paperback
Reviews: Write a Review

4 Book Reviews submitted by our Members...sorted by voted most helpful

kittycat1 avatar reviewed Cold Granite on + 6 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
This is the first book by this author and it is an excellent read about a Scottish policeman and the solving of crime committed by a child murderer. I look forward to reading the next book by Stuart MacBride.
Spuddie avatar reviewed Cold Granite on + 412 more book reviews
#1 Logan MacRae Scottish police procedural series. DS MacRae, on his first day back to work after a year-long medical leave following a stabbing that left him near-dead, ends up as lead investigator on a child murder casethe months-dead body of a four-year-old boy found in a ditch who appears to have been tortured and sexually abused. Logan was supposed to be gently transitioned back into work, but this murder kicks off a couple of weeks from hell, in which several other childrens bodies are found, though not all of them are related to the first case. Logan is also recovering from a break-up with his girlfriend, who happens to be the medical examiner/pathologist.

I had a really hard time putting this book downstayed up later than usual to finish it, in fact. The writing was very compelling and the story was quite interesting. While mostly a bleak, dark book, MacBride does inject enough humor into it so that it doesnt feel quite so grim. And I really do like Logan. However, after I finished it and thought back, there was much about the book and the procedures, etc. that I found to question. Perhaps police procedure works differently in Aberdeen, but it seemed to me that Logan, as a Detective Sergeant, had a whole lot more direct involvement, leadership responsibility and latitude with his activity than most other DSs Ive read about in other series, who seem to be assigned a lot of mundane detail work while the Detective Inspectors and higher do the actual investigation. He basically solves all the casesobviously hes brilliant, so why is he still a DS? As often happens I did figure out most of the cases well ahead of the policethese nice juicy obvious clues kept falling right in the readers lap! LOL

Also, the interconnections of all the various cases just seemed a little too pat, too coincidental. While not a sprawling metropolitan area, Aberdeen does have over 200,000 people and it just doesnt seem likely that these cases could all connect up like they did. There was also a lot of repetition with regard to descriptionsof the weather, especially. Yes, it was rainy and snowy. We get it. How many ways and times can that (or can wet and miserable policemen) be described without becoming tiresome? At any rate, despite those negatives, I am quite excited about this series and am looking forward to the next one but Im hoping MacBride learns to tighten things up a bit and makes the plots more plausible in future works.
maura853 avatar reviewed Cold Granite on + 542 more book reviews
Excellent: "just" a good, old-fashioned police procedural, but could serve any writer, in any genre, as a masterclass in narrative, pacing, characterisation and sense of place. The crimes under investigation -- the murder of small children -- was handled with due respect for its horror and heartbreak, but also with the flashes of dark humour that I'm sure police investigators must use to cope. I particularly liked the way that MacBride has his team juggle the investigations of 4+ cases: much more realistic than stories in which an inspired Lone Wolf has the luxury of concentrating on one case, to the exclusion of everything else.

MacBride must VERY popular with Aberdeen Tourism Board: how many ways can you describe rain? (Until it starts to sleet ... ?) Great sense of place, however: Aberdeen is like a character in its own right
reviewed Cold Granite on + 3152 more book reviews
Wanted to stick with this but it was so sloooooow and draggy, takes place in Scotland so is written in the Scottish brogue(I guess) and was kind of hard to get the words right so it made each dialogue hard to read and understand.

Doubt I read anymore by MacBride