Published by Allison & Busby,
21 May 2026.
ISBN: 978-0-7490-3343-9 (HB)
Wedding bells will be chiming in the near future for DCI Kelso Strang, head of Scotland's Rural Crime Squad, and his lawyer fiancée Catriona Fleming. Cat is a familiar figure from Aline Templeton's earlier series, as is her mother Marjory, a retired DI, and they're busy arranging flowers, seating plans and meetings with the vicar. Kelso is keen to be married but less enthused by all the wedding-related fuss, so when a body turns up in a remote Highland village, he's guiltily relieved.
The body belongs to Brodie Campbell, the local gamekeeper, who was useful to the local police. But Brodie was so unpopular with most of the village that everyone's a potential suspect, and Kelso finds just about everyone reluctant to talk in case they incriminate someone else.
DS Livvy Murray has been detailed to help Kelso with the investigation. The shortcomings of the Airbnb they're staying in make her keen to shift the blame for the murder on to outsiders from Glasgow's gang culture so that she and Kelso can go home, especially after the arrival of a capable graduate entry DC whom Kelso has worked with before. In the past Livvy wasn't above going rogue in pursuit of her own theories, but she has calmed down a lot. All the same, her tendency to use her initiative pays off, with a discovery that comes close to cracking the case.
Aline Templeton certainly knows how to put together a storyline that's almost as twisty as the mountain passes. As well as the murder, there's a drug problem, common in small communities where both work and leisure activities are thin on the ground for young people; and a parallel investigation is looking at hijackings of deliveries from local fish processors. But as always in Templeton's books, the characters and the locations are at least as important as the plot. The story unfolds against a spectacular Highlands backdrop of mountains, lochs and precipitous roads; the weather is as dramatic as the landscape and causes more than one problem for the SRCS team.
Kelso, Livvy and Cat are familiar figures, and following their development is one of the great pleasures of the series. Kelso's boss DCS Jane Borthwick, the redoubtable JB, makes an occasional appearance and has work problems of her own; and workshy DI Mackenzie from the local force is no help at all.
In the village, the women are nursing secrets. Mairead runs the local café despite fragile health, and has plenty to hide, especially from her feckless artist husband. Zoe Cooper, waitress at the café, girlfriend of local bad boy Jago Innes and woman of mystery, comes and goes as she pleases. And then there's Anna Bruce, who recently moved to the village and has created a thriving catering business; no one seems to know anything about her.
Eventually
secrets are revealed, Brodie Campbell's killer is unmasked, and Kelso and Livvy
can go home – he to prepare for his wedding, she to await their next case. As,
no doubt, will Aline Templeton's many readers with eager anticipation, me among
them; Kelso Strang is rapidly becoming one of Scotland's most engaging
detectives.
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Reviewer: Lynne Patrick
Aline Templeton grew up in the fishing village of Anstruther, on the east coast of Scotland not far from St Andrews. The memories of beautiful scenery and a close community inspired her to set the Marjory Fleming series in a place very like that – rural Galloway, in the south-west of Scotland. After attending Cambridge University to read English she taught for a few years. She now writes full-time. Her most recent series features DCI Kelso Strang, officer in charge of Police Scotland’s Serious Rural Crime Squad. Truth To Tell is the seventh book in the series.
http://www.alinetempleton.co.uk
Lynne Patrick has been a writer ever since she could pick up a pen, and has enjoyed success with short stories, reviews and feature journalism, but never, alas, with a novel. She crossed to the dark side to become a publisher for a few years and is proud to have launched several careers which are now burgeoning. She lives in Oxfordshire in a house groaning with books, about half of them crime fiction.




















