“Woman battles to save daughter in dark web game”
A woman calls the police because her husband is confronted by a stranger. When the police arrive the house is drenched in blood but there are no bodies. Following a tip-off the police rapidly arrest a man covered with tattoos of numbers and forensic evidence clearly links him to the crime. However, he refuses to say where the bodies are hidden; in fact he refuses to say anything. Mila, a former criminologist and profiler, is called back by the police in the hope that she can unlock the riddle. Reluctant to get dragged back into a world she hates, she nevertheless elicits some new evidence in the form of a grid reference. She also recognises that the man is a Whisperer, someone who can persuade others to carry out serious crimes including murder. The trail leads her to a dark web interactive game in which gamers can live out their wildest fantasies safely – or perhaps not so safely. When her ten year old daughter is kidnapped, Mila has no choice but to enter the game as an avatar of herself. Can she solve the enigma of the tattooed man’s identity, can she solve the murder which started the story, can she save her daughter? The plot, as they say, thickens.
I use that cliché partly because it reflects the somewhat patchy English used, and partly because the plot really does thicken, i.e. becomes denser (this isn’t meant to be a compliment). The book is translated from Italian and the English, although grammatically accurate, is somewhat stilted. It is also quite repetitive, particularly in “reintroducing” characters with whom we are already familiar and “the-story-so-far” summations. There are a number of occasions when Mila is in jeopardy, but they don’t create much tension. The Game is integral to the plot, but I have issues with both the technology aspects and the activity of the whisperer. Perhaps it is a problem of genre – is it trying too hard to be a police procedural, a psychological thriller and a Sci-Fi story? This is the fourth book featuring Mila, but that doesn’t cause any difficulty since there is minimal connection between them. The ending feels unsatisfactory, although this is partly because the author is clearly setting up for a sequel. Overall I was disappointed and felt that a good idea had got lost in the telling. I’m around 2.5 on this, which rounds to 3.
I would like to thank NetGalley, the publishers and the author for providing me with a draft proof copy for the purpose of this review.
Hardback edition
This reviewer received a free of charge product for review.