
ShortBookandScribes #BookReview – Human Remains by Jo Callaghan
Human Remains by Jo Callaghan is published by Simon & Schuster and is out now. My thanks to the publishers for sending me a copy for review.
DCS Kat Frank and AIDE Lock are back in a cutting-edge new thriller.
The truth will always come out, but at what cost?
Fresh from successfully closing their first live case, the Future Policing Unit are called in to investigate when a headless, handless body is found on a Warwickshire farm. But as they work to identify the victim and their killer, the discovery of a second body begins to spark fears that The Aston Strangler is back. And as the stakes rise for the team, so do the tensions brewing within it.
When DCS Kat Frank is accused of putting the wrong man behind bars all those years ago, AIDE Lock – the world’s first AI detective – pursues the truth about what happened with relentless logic. But Kat is determined to keep the past buried, and when she becomes the target of a shadowy figure looking for revenge, Lock is torn between his evidence-based algorithms and the judgement of his partner, with explosive results.
When everything hangs in the balance, it will all come down to just how much an AI can learn, and what happens when they do . . .
The DCS Kat Frank and AIDE Lock series has fast become one of my favourite crime/police series and so I was very eagerly looking forward to reading book three, Human Remains. As expected I loved it.
The main story at first appears to be the discovery of a headless and handless body on a farm and the team’s investigation into what happened and who the body belongs to. However, it’s not long before Kat’s biggest case comes back to haunt her, that of the Aston Strangler. Kat solved the case back then but now a podcast is casting doubt as to whether the right person was caught and imprisoned.
The team are back together and one of the strongest thing about this series is the characterisations and the way that individual members of the team interact with Lock, not to mention the sheer brilliance of Lock itself. The AI detective is brilliantly written and portrayed and I love how it can read hundreds of articles in seconds, or watch numerous TV series in the same amount of time. There’s no denying it is a huge help within the team in terms of doing the work that it would take a human days or weeks to get through, but some developments in this book really highlighted the potential for AI to be misused or relied on too heavily.
I was absolutely gripped by this book, particularly the last third or so where the pace accelerated rather quickly. I’m desperate now for book four, especially because of how this one ended. Talk about chilling! Human Remains is an absolutely fantastic and thoroughly absorbing read and I very highly recommend it and the whole series so far.
Jo Callaghan works full time as a senior strategist, carrying out research into the future impact of AI and genomics on the workforce. She was a student of the Writers’ Academy Course (Penguin Random House) and was longlisted for the Mslexia Novel Writing Competition and Bath Novel Competition. After losing her husband to cancer in 2019 when she was just forty-nine, she started writing In the Blink of an Eye, her debut crime novel, which explores learning to live with loss and what it means to be human. She lives with her two children in the Midlands, where she spends far too much time tweeting as @JoCallaghanKat and is currently working on further novels in the series.