How do you solve a crime when the victim doesn't believe you have the right to exist?
Robyn Bailley has taken a big step. At the age of forty-four, the Detective Inspector has come out as a trans woman. Unfortunately, the day she chooses to return to work in her new identity is the same day a child goes missing from a shopping centre so everyone is looking at her. With little Ben's mother not hiding her disapproval, Robyn also has to deal with the reactions from her family, colleagues and the media. During the frantic hunt, Robyn has to keep her team working under the intense scrutiny. Then a body is found.
Set in 2016, examines the challenges of gender dysphoria in an enlightened way, showing the difficulties for the transgender community through a protagonist under scrutiny and coming to terms with her new identity. This is a cracking good read set in a contemporary fictional town in Kent. (David Caddy, Tears in the Fence)
Huge potential as a choice for reading groups, particularly as there is so much contemporary interest, and controversy, about the subject of gender dysphoria. (Nudge Books)
Overall… Clare's book is the best crime fiction discovery of the year for me and I'm rushing out to buy the sequel. (Brian Clegg)