Sunday Times

Gruff and rough, Brodie returns at last

- @michelemag­wood

Big Sky ★★★★★ Kate Atkinson, Doubleday, R290

One of the best characters in Big Sky is a woman named Crystal Holroyd. Crystal drives a white Range Rover and has a little girl called Candy, who she dresses as various Disney princesses. Crystal is, writes Atkinson, “a constructi­on, made from artificial material — the acrylic nails, the silicone breasts, the polymer lashes”. White-blonde hairpiece, fake tan. But if you assume Crystal is the bimbo she’s often called, you’d be wrong, because this is Kate Atkinson, and she has never written a predictabl­e or superficia­l character in her long career.

After an exceptiona­l trio of World War Two books: Life After Life, A God in Ruins and Transcript­ion, Atkinson has brought Jackson Brodie out of furlough for a fifth

and much-anticipate­d outing. A former soldier and policeman, Brodie now works as a private investigat­or. He’s gruff, a bit rough, with a harrowing backstory and a ragged patchwork of divorces. Like that other investigat­or on the other side of the pond, Jack Reacher, he’s been called a hero for men and women alike.

In Big Sky Brodie has moved from Edinburgh to a seemingly quiet village on the coast of Yorkshire, where he part-parents his annoying teenaged son and follows straying spouses. Crystal hires him because she believes she is being followed — and not by her alpha male husband — and Brodie is snagged into a bigger crime scene.

The story is, unfortunat­ely, bang ontrend with its theme of paedophili­a and sex traffickin­g, with many a reference to Jimmy Savile, but Atkinson writes with a dry wit and empathy that add many layers to this morality tale.

Gradually we learn the source of Crystal’s insecuriti­es, her neurotic cleaning and tidying and the pampering of her little girl. Atkinson aces the snobbishne­ss of the country club set and the slick, sickening deception that lures young eastern European women to the UK. There is a star turn by a compassion­ate old drag queen and a repulsive misogynist­ic comic, and a welcome return from an earlier book in the series of Reggie Chase, a young woman who is all grown up now and has become a cop.

You don’t need to have read the first four Jackson Brodie books to enjoy Big Sky, but you will want to.

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