Review of Suzanne Downes's book The Devil Drives a Jaguar, by Julie Bunting
This review is by Julie Bunting, and was published originally in
The Peak Advertiser, the Peak District's local free newspaper,
on 21st October 2002, and is reproduced with Julie's kind permission.
A BOOK REVIEW FOR HALLOE'EN: THE DEVIL DRIVES A JAGUAR
by Suzanne Downes
Suzanne, who lives in Stockport, claims that writing can be a very
therapeutic substitute for the sort of dastardly deed which might, or then
again might not, lie behind this psychological thriller set around an old
farmhouse in the Peak District. The Devil Drives a Jaguar is also a ghost
story, though the author, not unreasonably, is at her best putting flesh
on her living characters. There are hints that she is no stranger to local
libraries and record offices, with a real feeling for the dusty pleasures
of old documents and diaries, yet she brings her imagination into play
gradually so that the reader does not guess too much too soon. Suzanne
Downes injects a good dose of the macabre into her fiction, from the
hangman's noose and gibbet chains to a living psychopath. By contrast the
story does have a hero, though Mills & Boon it isn't.
The tale is never allowed to get sluggish. It expands at the sort of pace
which is not so convoluted that you are forever turning back the pages,
looking for that elusive sentence which seemed to mean nothing the first
time round. Whether the characters are all they seem may not be so easy to
fathom, and all the better for it. The author enjoys playing fast and loose
with your certainties, even when it comes to the victim/heroine, who tells
her story in the first person.
An interesting update about The Devil Drives a Jaguar comes from the book's
publisher, Dick Richardson of Country Books,
Little Longstone. Dick reveals
that the late actor John Thaw was very interested in the book and his widow,
Sheila Hancock, may continue fighting to obtain television rights for it. In
the meantime, it's the perfect choice for some late night reading around
Halloe'en.
The Devil Drives a Jaguar is priced £6.95, ISBN 1-898941-75-0. In stock or
to order through local bookshops.