Reviews for The Dark Wives
by Ann Cleeves
Kirkus
Copyright © Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
In the north of England, DI Vera Stanhope and her team labor to uncover the connection between a teen missing from a children’s care home and a pair of murders. When Chloe Spence disappears shortly after Josh Woodburn, a staffer at the Rosebank Home, is killed, she has to be considered a suspect. Chloe is a bright 14-year-old whose father left the family and mother is in a psychiatric hospital, and after Vera reads her diary, she thinks her innocent. The system that cares for troubled children is falling apart, and the private companies that run much of it don’t much care. Vera, who’s earned a reputation for solving weird cases, feels guilty over the recent death of a member of her team, leaving her to work with the proven DS Joe Ashworth and the ambitious new DC Rosie Bell. Chloe had been attending the well-regarded Salvation Academy, but her diary makes clear that plenty of problems were being pasted over to maintain the school’s good name. The staff at the home say only that Chloe was a loner who had a crush on Josh, a university student from a well-heeled family who took the job to impress the girl he loved, a save-the-world type. The next to die is another resident of the home, an older boy who sells drugs. It looks like an overdose to everyone but Vera, who smells more murder. Her biggest concern is finding Chloe—who’s deeply afraid of trusting anyone—before the killer does. An excellent character-driven entry that highlights major problems in Britain’s child welfare system. Copyright © Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.