Synopsis/blurb……
Officer Randy
Spelling had always wanted to be a police officer, to follow in the footsteps
of her brothers and her father. Not long after joining the force, she
mistakenly shoots and kills Lakeisha Gibbs, a pregnant teenager. The community
is outraged; Lakeisha’s family is vocal and vicious in their attacks against
Spelling. Suffering from post-traumatic
stress disorder, and filled with remorse, Randy is desperate to apologize to
the girl’s family. Everyone, including
the police chief, warns her against this, but the young police officer will not
be dissuaded. Her attempt is
catastrophic. Dr. Dot Meyerhoff, police psychologist, plunges herself into the
investigation despite orders from the police chief to back off. Not only does
the psychologist’s refusal to obey orders jeopardize her career, but her life
as well, as she enlists unlikely allies and unconventional undercover work to
expose the tangled net of Officer Spelling’s disastrous course.
My second time with author Ellen Kirschman and her police psychologist Dot Meyerhoff, after enjoying Burying
Ben back in 2014. Review here.
Dot’s back in the firing line again. Having cleared Randy
Spelling as psychologically sound to take up a position with the Kenilworth
Police Department; Spelling is soon involved in an incident where a male
officer gets attacked and in the subsequent melee she panics and flees. Her colleagues
turn on her.
Already on the defensive and somewhat isolated, trouble
looms larger when Spelling kills a black, pregnant and unarmed teenager, an
incident that further estranges the police department from elements of the community
they serve.
Dot tries to help Randy cope with the guilt she feels, by
counselling both her and her husband Rich Spelling. With a new and unpopular
female police chief, a black community backlash, a troubled officer in Spelling
- struggling to cope with the aftermath of the incident and cracks appearing in
her marriage to Rick; the last thing Dot needs is a new tree-hugging, eye-lid
fluttering, ambulance chasing competitor of a psychologist in town – Marvel Johnson.
That’s what she gets.
I really enjoyed The Right Wrong Thing. It’s a fresh look at
the police and the problems they face, from the perspective of an informed
outsider. Meyerhoff whilst attempting to connect with Randy, struggles to help her overcome her guilt about the incident and the need she feels to apologise to the victim's family. On a more general level, we see the difficulties a police counsellor faces in trying to establish a rappor with officers and their fears that the
feelings and details revealed in their sessions don’t automatically get passed
up the chain of command to the hierarchy in the department.
Kirschman adds flesh to the bones of our tale, by offering an insight
into Dot’s own frailties and insecurities, both from a career perspective and
in her personal life. Having been betrayed by her ex-husband in our previous
book, Dot is still taking baby steps with the new man in her life, Frank. The
ups and downs of this relationship, as the case unfolds and then explodes adds
another layer to the story.
A dramatic event at the mid-point of the book, ups the ante.
Overall verdict - enjoyable and thought provoking without
being preachy. With a lot of recent high publicity police shootings, particularly
white on black, it’s interesting to get the often unheard police perspective to
balance the debate. Kirschman’s no police apologist, but with over 30 years as
a police psychologist, she articulates the pressures and fears and split-second
decision making first responders have to make when approaching dangerous, life
threatening situations.
4.5 from 5.
Ellen Kirschman
has her website here. She was kind enough to send me a copy of this one for
review.
Col, I think I'd read this book for the characterisation of Randy Spelling and Dot Meyerhoff. Both are appealing.
ReplyDeletePrashant - Dot is definitely the star of the show! Its interesting to kind of get a sideways but still informed view of the police and the pressures they face.
DeleteThis sounds like a really compelling look at what modern policing is like, Col - from a different perspective, as you say. And I like the idea of a focus on the characters. That lets the author explore the way everything actually impacts the people involved.
ReplyDeleteShe obviously knows the world she describes Margot and she can portray it whilst still entertaining and to a lesser degree educating. I think you might enjoy her books.
DeleteSounds good, the first one sounded good too. I will definitely be interested when I am (1) buying books, (2) have gotten through some other authors I have on my shelves that I haven't tried yet. But a female author and a female protagonist, that is definitely one to try.
ReplyDeleteTracy, I think you would enjoy this series, when the time comes.
DeleteOh yes - I read the first one on your reco, and really enjoyed it. The police psychologist is a good setup. Definitely one for the list.
ReplyDeleteI thought you had. Definitely up your street I think.
DeleteLooks good -- I'll keep an eye out. Thanks for the headsup!
ReplyDeleteI hope you come across it John,
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