Thought Box

Into the Mind of A Cop

Into the Mind of A Cop

by Deepa Gahlot June 28 2018, 4:37 pm Estimated Reading Time: 5 mins, 9 secs

A lot of writers have come up with bestselling crime fiction, but not many of them would know the workings of a police force inside out, as one who has been there. Clare Mackintosh quit the police force to make a career as a writer of crime fiction and has three bestsellers to her name already with testimonials from other thriller writers.

Her latest Let Me Lie, sets up an intriguing premise. Successful car dealer, Tom Johnson, suddenly drowns himself at the town’s suicide point of Beachy Head, making sure his body stays underwater by carrying a bag full of rocks. Seven months later, his wife, Caroline, commits a copycat suicide by throwing herself into the water at the same spot in the same way. Their daughter, Anna, is devastated and is helped in trying to overcome her grief by her counsellor boyfriend Mark, uncle Billy, friend Laura (who was also her mother’s goddaughter) and her infant daughter Ella.


The Book Castle

On the first anniversary of her mother’s suicide,  Anna gets a card that says, “Suicide? Think Again” and her life starts unravelling. She now believes her mother was murdered, and possibly her father too. Murray Mackenzie, the cop who meets her at the police station, is retired and working as a civilian volunteer.  Even though an anonymous card is not enough to prove foul play, his instinct tells him that there is more to the Johnson couple’s suicides than the police officers on duty noted.

On his own time, and defying warnings from the chief, he starts investigating the case. Mackintosh has given Murray more attention than the whiny and quite unappealing Anna, who at twenty-six, cannot get a grip on herself. Murray cares with great tenderness with his wife, Sarah, who suffers from Borderline Personality Disorder, and is in and out of a mental asylum. But when she is relatively normal, Murray discusses his cases with her and she often sees what others have missed. The novel could have easily been about Murray than Anna, who does not contribute much to the story, except bouts of hysteria.

The book kicks to life halfway through, and then races towards an unpredictable climax, but the reader has to stay patient, and hope the author will add some twists... which she does. Maybe a little too late

Her second book, a psychological thriller, I See You, was a bestseller. It is so scary because it could be true, and happen to any woman who commutes to work. Zoe Walker, a forty-ish mother of two teenage kids, is on her way home from work, when she turns the pages of a newspaper and finds her own picture staring out of a ‘Personal’ ad that lists a website called findtheone.com.


The Sun

Her family—live-in boyfriend, Simon, and kids—convince her that it must be a lookalike. Then, she sees the photo of another woman in a similar ad and when she is found murdered, Zoe calls the police. The only one who takes her seriously is Kelly Swift, a detective who is suffering a punishment posting in the transport department for the crime of hitting a child molester during an interrogation. Kelly is unusually sensitive because her twin sister was raped when in college. The sister has chosen to forget the incident and get on with her life, but Kelly cannot get it out of her mind.

Kelly wheedles her way into this investigation and when she and Zoe start digging into the strange website, they uncover something too shocking to believe—that someone sells details of women’s daily commutes to subscribers on the website, so that they can stalk those women. It’s a bizarre dating tool for some men, and for the psychos an easy route to rape and murder.

The suspense is nail-biting and, at a time when women are being stalked and attacked all over the world, the book is also a cautionary tale, indirectly advising women to keep a check on their surroundings during their commute to and from work, and never trust strangers.

Her debut novel, I Let You Go, was a bestseller and award-winner, picked for TV series and had translation rights sold to over 30 countries.The book’s opening scene grabs the reader by the collar and never loosens that grip.  At Christmastime in Bristol, a  hit-and-run accident kills a five-year-old boy named Jacob, who, just for a moment, let go of his mother’s hand. His mother looks on in horror and later, is unable to note the car’s number or any other details.


The Indian Express

Detective Inspector Ray Stevens, who is in charge of the case is angered by the callousness of the driver who knocked down a child and did not even stop to help. It does not make it easier for them, when the mother of the child vanishes without a trace, probably traumatised by the death of her child and the hate spewed on social media accusing her of being a bad mom.

The efforts of Ray and his deputies to solve the case, are interspersed with the story of Jenna Gray, who leaves home after the accident and is haunted by it. She goes to a remote coastal village of Penfach to rebuild her life in anonymity. Jenna is not who she says she is and has a shocking connection to the accident that killed little Jacob. When the cops land at her door, Jenna’s troubled life is laid bare.

Mackintosh knows just how to layer the suspense, time the twists and keep the reader on tenterhooks. With this novel, she joined the ranks of popular crime novelists and her later books proved that she is not a one-hit wonder.

Let Me Lie

By Clare Mackintosh 

Publisher: Hachette

Pages: 400

I See You

By Clare Mackintosh

Publisher: Hachette

Pages: 372

I Let You Go

By Clare Mackintosh

Publisher: Hachette

Pages: 387




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