LETHAL STORM by Pauline Rowson

4* A little bit wooly and over-thought in parts, but worth persisting with.

This is a book mid-series but it's all action and it wasn't hard getting into. Ex-commando investigates the 'suicide' of a colleague and friend, and finds a web of lies, obfuscation and betrayals. And the good old fractured NHS features quite a bit, in a tale that I could easily see happening, sadly, not dissimilar to the Mone case going through our courts right now. 

To try and go into the tale would've give it away, but the Indian aspects - I'm Asian - is pretty accurate and believable given the ambitions of Indians in the UK, at least. One's kids can't really do what they please, love wgo they please, live the authentic lives they want to, because, ugh, honour, family reputation, tradition, keeping up with the Patels, etc. Most of which gets convincingly blown out of the water.

It was in places overly busy, and a good editor could have weeded some stuff out, avoiding the bogged-down bits in the last third that made me start-stop. But, it began to get more convincing and pulled me back in when certain people's egos became their downfall. 

The next might be interesting, from the blurb I saw, but I'm not quite compelled to go looking for the back catalogue.

ARC courtesy of NetGalley and Joffe Books for my reading pleasure. 

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