Those We Left Behind by Stuart Neville
Monday, September 21, 2015 at 7:09AM 
Published by Soho Crime on September 22, 2015
Two brothers, Ciaran and Thomas  Devine, were prosecuted for killing the foster father with whom they  lived. Ciaran, the younger brother, was convicted of beating the man to  death while Thomas was convicted of acting as an accessory. At the time,  Ciaran said he was protecting Thomas from ongoing abuse. The dead man's  son, Daniel, never believed his father abused Thomas and has always  been convinced that Thomas was the actual murderer. When Ciaran and  Thomas are released from juvenile detention years later, Daniel remains  obsessed with exposing what he regards as the truth.
DCI Serena  Flanagan participated in the investigation at the time Ciaran and Thomas  were arrested. A bit of the story is told in flashbacks as Flanagan  recalls her suspicion of Ciaran's innocence and her botched attempt to  persuade him to tell the truth. Most of the story, however, follows the  two boys after their release, including Flanagan's suspicion that one or  both of them have committed another murder. Breaking the bond between  the brothers may be the only way Flanagan can get at the truth, but can  she do that without placing her own life at risk?
The other key  character, Probation Officer Paula Cunningham, is charged with  supervising Ciaran after his release. Her role in the story is less  central than Flanagan's and her character development is scant compared  to Flanagan's. Having first appeared in The Final Silence,  Neville is establishing Flanagan with the typical stereotypes of  fictional police detectives -- her home life is troubled because she  puts her work ahead of her family -- but, unlike fictional cops who are  always right when everyone else thinks they're wrong, Flanagan is  capable of making bad judgments. That makes her a more believable police  character than most.
The most interesting feature of the plot is  the question of how far Flanagan will go to get the truth from Ciaran.  Is it acceptable for a police officer to question a suspect, even  informally, in a way that might cause the suspect to believe that the  officer wants to be intimate with him? Police deceive suspects all the  time by pretending to be their friend, but at what point is a line  crossed when an officer exploits the romantic or sexual feelings of a  vulnerable young suspect? The exploration of that question gives the  novel its moral force.
After the truth about Thomas and Ciaran is  revealed, the story loses its energy. The remaining 50 or 60 pages are  standard thriller fare, although the ending is intense. I appreciated the attempt to humanize Ciaran but  Thomas, clearly intended as a contrast, is a shallower and less  interesting character. On the whole, Those We Left Behind is not as  powerful as some of Stuart Neville's Belfast novels, but it is a solid  police thriller.
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