Sue Grafton. S Is For Silence. (2005) Violet Sullivan disappeared on a July 4th evening. Her daughter Daisy wants her found, because she feels abandoned. Kinsey winkles out the truth. Her investigation upsets a lot of apple carts, as usual. Grafton includes flashbacks to narrate Violet’s story up to the time of her disappearance. These also give us glimpses of the suspects and bystanders, as well as clues that Kinsey (and later the police) do not have. Even so, it takes the reader (me) a while to suss who killed Violet.
Grafton’s interested in character, and in how mistaken ideas of morality, the yearning for respectability, and the rigidity of socially defined roles deform relationships and prevent happiness. That some people bring psychopathic evil into the mix just makes the world more dangerous. Still, in the end, a sort of justice prevails, and people achieve acceptance of what they can’t change. Grafton indulges in a few bits of poetic justice, thus satisfying our all-too-human thirst for revenge.
One of Grafton’s best, not least because the interleaving of past and present. ****