Good Friday by Lynda La Plante

 Good Friday

 by Lynda La Plante




It's Not Who Will Die Next But How Many.......


Good Friday by Lynda La Plante was published on22nd March 2018 by Zaffre.

My thanks to the author and publisher for sending me a copy to review and to Tracy at Compulsive Readers for inviting me to be a part of #TeamTennison




Synopsis

Every legend has a beginning . . .

During 1974 and 1975 the IRA subjected London to a terrifying bombing campaign. In one day alone, they planted seven bombs at locations across central London. Some were defused - some were not.

Jane Tennison is now a fully-fledged detective. On the way to court one morning, Jane passes through Covent Garden Underground station and is caught up in a bomb blast that leaves several people dead, and many horribly injured. Jane is a key witness, but is adamant that she can't identify the bomber. When a photograph appears in the newspapers, showing Jane assisting the injured at the scene, it puts her and her family at risk from IRA retaliation.

'Good Friday' is the eagerly awaited date of the annual formal CID dinner, due to take place at St Ermin's Hotel. Hundreds of detectives and their wives will be there. It's the perfect target. As Jane arrives for the evening, she realises that she recognises the parking attendant as the bomber from Covent Garden. Can she convince her senior officers in time, or will another bomb destroy London's entire detective force?





My Review

This is the third book in the Jane Tennison series which prequels Prime Suspect, viewed by many on television starring Helen Mirren.
The story is centred around the IRA bombing that Jane is caught up in and whether she can persuade her superiors to believe her once her memory returns and she recognises the bomber, before he blows up the entire detective force.
I have to be honest , Jane is really starting to grate on my nerves with her naivety and determination to get promoted at all costs without thinking through each step of the way logically. Consequently I find myself wanting to sit her down  and have a good talk with her about the best way forward in a male chauvinistic police force of the seventies. 
Her superiors. as usual, are not being honest with her and view her almost as an expendable female officer and whether they can, or cannot, get her into bed. However, Jane doesn't help this situation either by also looking at every senior officer she meets as to whether they are boyfriend material.
However, like in the previous books, she still shows that strong determination that she has to get to the bottom of what is going on and solve the crime at all costs, refusing to be pushed to one side.
Hopefully the next book in the series will start to get away from this element and we start to see a more mature Jane appearing.


About the Author




Lynda La Plante was born in Liverpool. She trained for the stage at RADA and worked with the National Theatre and RSC before becoming a television actress. She then turned to writing and made her breakthrough with the phenomenally successful TV series Widows.   Her novels have all been international bestsellers. Her original script for the much-acclaimed Prime Suspect won awards from BAFTA, British Broadcasting and the Royal Television Society as well as the 1993 Edgar Allan Poe Award.   Lynda La Plante was made an honorary fellow of the British Film Institute and was given the BAFTA Dennis Potter Award in 2000. She was awarded a CBE in the Queen's Birthday Honours list in 2008 and was inaugurated into the Crime Thriller Writers' Hall of Fame in 2009. 

  Visit Lynda at her website: www.lyndalaplante.com 

Twitter: @LaPlanteLyndawww.

facebook.com/LyndaLaPlanteCBE

 

@simonschusteruk 

@ lyndalaplante

@zaffrebooks


# teamtennison


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