Published by MacLehose Press,
29 January 2026.
ISBN 978 1 52942 343 3
True Blue is the final installment- following White Riot and Red Menace- of a thought-provoking trilogy that chronicles the turbulent times and events that occurred in East London between the late seventies and the end of 1990. This book is mainly concerned with 1990, Margaret Thatcher’s final year in office. It was also a year when the introduction of the poll tax ensured that the poor became poorer and the comfortably-off became richer following the privatization of the water industry. As in the earlier parts of the trilogy, music and well-informed commentary on it continue to play a major part in the story. Unfortunately, corrupt police officers continue to flourish supporting a burgeoning drug trade whilst deliberately and maliciously targeting black youth.
DC Noble’s job is to uncover corruption within the police force whilst ostensibly investigating the illegal rave scene from within the Acid Squad task force. Nobel works out of Stoke Newington and is helped by an undercover officer or spycop, PC Parker, who is well integrated within the local villains and Suzi Scialfa, a photo journalist who hob nobs with the local musicians and is therefore well-placed to gather intelligence for him.
CI Young is Noble’s boss. As head of the Special Demonstration Squad, Young also holds a senior role in Scotland Yard’s Anti-Corruption Squad CIB2. His allegiance to his work leaves everything to be desired.
We watch as trusting citizens and black youths are mistreated by the forces of both law and disorder whose intent is to line their pockets with no consideration for the damage they do to individuals or society as a whole. We see the futile efforts of well-meaning individuals like Parker and his partner Carolyn to keep her young cousin Shaun on the straight and narrow after he had been released from Feltham youth offenders’ institution. We comprehend the sickening tragedy that strikes after another black youth Simeon is misled by the underhand efforts of drug dealers to implicate him in their nefarious trade. We follow the well-intentioned efforts of the borough solicitor as he endeavors to understand unusual behaviour in his catchment area designed to facilitate the privatization of the water industry.
Although
a work of fiction True Blue feels uncomfortably authentic and provides a
meticulously researched conclusion to this graphic trilogy of institutional
corruption and failings. It is also a horrifying confirmation of behaviour that
we have all been informed about but have found the abject betrayal by those
supposed to keep us safe difficult to believe and easier to brush off as
improbable and unlikely. True Blue is not all gloom and doom, there is
qualified happiness too. Both Noble and
Parker become fathers. Sadly, only one of the newborns will grow up with his
father in the house. Overall, it is an excellent book. It can easily be read as
a one off, but readers may well want to start at the beginning of the trilogy.
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Reviewer Angela Crowther
Joe Thomas is a visiting lecturer in Literature and Creative Writing at Royal Holloway, University of London. Prior to this, he lived and taught in São Paulo for ten years. Gringa is the second book to feature detective Mario Leme. The first, Paradise City, was published by Arcadia in 2017.
Angela Crowther is a retired scientist. She has published many scientific papers but, as yet, no crime fiction. In her spare time Angela belongs to a Handbell Ringing group, goes country dancing and enjoys listening to music, particularly the operas of Verdi and Wagner.

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