The Eloquence of the Dead by Conor Brady
Monday, May 2, 2016 at 8:54AM 
First published in Ireland in 2013; published by Minotaur Books on March 15, 2016
Decades after the Famine, the owners of large estates in Ireland have  agreed (or been forced) to sell their land to the government, part of a  plan to give Ireland back to the Irish. Corruption in that process  provides one of the plot threads in The Eloquence of the Dead.
The  story begins in 1887 with the murder of Ambrose Pollock, a pawnbroker  in Dublin. The police, eager to avoid any actual investigatory work, are  quick to blame the pawnbroker’s sister, Phoebe Pollock, who has gone  missing. The question soon arises whether she is missing or dead.
DS  Joseph Swallow investigates Ambrose’s murder and Phoebe’s  disappearance. His investigation requires him to consider a robbery, the  origin of rare coins that are turning up in Dublin, and a land fraud  scheme. The interweaving of these plot elements is sufficiently complex  to hold the reader’s interest without becoming convoluted. The story  works its way to a conclusion that is satisfying if not particularly  surprising.
Certain that his Catholicism will prevent him from  rising above his current rank, Swallow wonders whether he should pursue  another profession as he chases down a variety of criminals. Swallow is  typical of a crime fiction police protagonist in that he has  difficulties with relationships, grievances about being  underappreciated, and complaints about cops who are more committed to  making themselves look good than to catching criminals.
A number  of other characters, including detectives and criminals, are given about  as much characterization as they need in a murder mystery. One of the  stronger characters is Margaret Gessel who, having sold the family land,  traveled from Ireland to London, only to be disappointed that her  cousin, a prominent politician, is barely acknowledging her existence.
The  politics of the time and place add an extra layer of interest to The  Eloquence of the Dead. The novel illustrates that some things never  change. Power protects power, whether in England and Ireland of the  1880s, or any other place at any other time.
Conor Brady’s prose  is above average for a mystery, although about average for Irish crime  writers, and well above the prose wielded by American crime novelists  (featuring single sentence paragraphs and single page chapters) who too  often dominate the market. The writing, characters, and plot make  Brady’s second Joe Swallow novel an entertaining read, although I  wouldn’t shelve it with the best examples of Irish crime fiction.
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