cover image The Mercy Seat

The Mercy Seat

Martyn Waites, . . Pegasus, $25 (421pp) ISBN 978-1-933648-00-2

An enterprising new publishing house launches its list with British author Waite's sixth crime novel (his first to be published in the U.S.), a beautifully written and constructed thriller that courageously avoids using sentimentality to balance despair. When journalist Joe Donovan's six-year-old son disappears in a crowded department store, his marriage falls apart, he loses his high-profile newspaper job, and he retreats to rural Northumberland. Two years later, the top editor of Donovan's former newspaper (a touchingly believable woman) and a shrewd lawyer somewhat short on scruples seek Donovan's aid in discovering why an ace reporter has vanished. The pair promise in return to help Donovan in his obsessive search for his lost son. Raw violence explodes on almost every page (the titular mercy seat is an especially vicious instrument of torture), and there are some artfully awful villains. But what readers are likely to take away from this potent first of a new series is the resilient power of Donovan's feelings, especially for the female editor and a lost street boy named Jamal. (Apr.)