Tuesday, June 23, 2026

"A Twist in the River"

Stig Abell believes that discovering a crime fiction series to enjoy is one of the great pleasures in life. His first novel, Death Under A Little Sky, introduced Jake Jackson and his attempt to get away from his former life in the beautiful area around Little Sky, followed by Death in a Lonely Place, The Burial Place, and now A Twist in the River. Abell is absolutely delighted that there are more on the way. Away from books, he presents the breakfast show on Times Radio, a station he helped to launch in 2020. Before that he was a regular presenter on Radio 4’s Front Row and was the editor and publisher of the Times Literary Supplement. He lives in London with his wife, three children and two independent-minded cats called Boo and Ninja (his children named them, obviously).

Abell applied the Page 69 Test to A Twist in the River and reported the following:
I love the Page 69 Test. For A Twist in the River, it sort of works, at least from a plot point of view. In the novel, women are going missing from a wild stretch of British countryside and being found – unmarked – in the river. Our hero, Jake Jackson (the former detective, long-haired fugitive from the modern world) is drawn in, as are plenty of journalists and online influencers obsessed with true crime stories.

On page 69, we see Dani, the YouTuber, who wants to make her name by solving the case, and is willing to get close to Jake to help achieve that. Here she is archly flirting with him, in front of Jake’s pregnant fiancĂ©e, Livia, who is none too amused by it all (“I feel fat and loathsome, not at all helped at seeing you half-naked being felt up by that pasty Kardashian”).

The page captures the dynamic between Jake and Livia, and the forcefulness of Dani, who accidentally became one of my favourite characters in the novel. Jake and Livia’s relationship is at the heart of the whole series (A Twist in the River exists as a stand-alone murder mystery, but is the fourth Jake Jackson book), and an important part – I hope – of what keeps readers engaged. Who doesn’t love a love story?

The main thing missing from page 69 is a sense of the landscape. The countryside and the river are key characters in the book, and I’ve always relished the tactile feel of lingering descriptions of the bucolic setting that create much of the mood of the story.

So not a bad sample all in all. You can come for the sexual tension, then stay for the mystery and sense of fleeting beauty in an otherwise overcrowded world!
Follow Stig Abell on Instagram and Threads.

Q&A with Stig Abell.

The Page 69 Test: The Burial Place.

Writers Read: Stig Abell.

--Marshal Zeringue