Since the release of the first book, I’ve been a fan of Robin Ellacott and Cormoran Strike. Despite being completely different, they work as a perfect team. Together they have handled some hard cases in the past but this new case could be their hardest and most risky investigation ever. They are dealing with a shady organisation and to uncover the truth, both have to take the risk without knowing if the outcome will be to the satisfaction of their client.
Somewhere I’ve read that The Running Grave is the last book of the series, therefore I had high expectations concerning a well-rounded conclusion with no open questions.
All books in the series have a high amount of pages, this one is no exception maybe even more. That could be the author’s style or another thought maybe that this seventh case is too complex to write in a shorter amount of pages. In any case, this didn’t put me off, I don’t mind holding a large book in my hands, that’s for me how reading should be.
It is a complex case, which made it difficult to get into the story, the introduction of all the facts and characters takes up a lot of pages. And just because of this amount of figures appearing throughout I got sometimes confused about keeping all those names apart. For me, the interesting part began when the investigation was in full swing and more clues appeared. Strike’s ways of investigating are well-thought, he never reveals anything until the end.
It is undeniably a long story, it took me a long time to finish it and I am not satisfied with the end. Compared to the total length of the book, the conclusion was for me too compressed, not enough to end a series. Therefore I hope that there is more to come and the series hasn’t reached its end.