Below is the complete list of Deborah Crombie’s Duncan Kincaid/Gemma James books in order of publication. This is the recommended reading sequence for the series.
Duncan Kincaid/Gemma James Books in Publication Order
- A Share in Death (1993)
View Book - All Shall Be Well (1994)
View Book - Leave the Grave Green (1996)
View Book - Mourn Not Your Dead (1996)
View Book - Dreaming of the Bones (1997)
View Book - Kissed a Sad Goodbye (1999)
View Book - A Finer End (2001)
View Book - And Justice There Is None (2002)
View Book - Now May You Weep (2003)
View Book - In a Dark House (2004)
View Book - Water Like a Stone (2007)
View Book - Where Memories Lie (2008)
View Book - Necessary as Blood (2009)
View Book - No Mark Upon Her (2011)
View Book - The Sound of Broken Glass (2013)
View Book - To Dwell in Darkness (2014)
View Book - Garden of Lamentations (2017)
View Book - A Bitter Feast (2019)
View Book - A Killing of Innocents (2023)
View Book
About Duncan Kincaid/Gemma James
Deborah Crombie’s Duncan Kincaid and Gemma James books are one of the more satisfying long-running detective series because they are built as much around partnership and domestic continuity as around murder. These are not novels that use recurring detectives only as familiar furniture. Kincaid and Gemma change, their relationship deepens, their work complicates their lives, and the series gradually becomes as much about the shape of a shared life as it is about solving crimes. That is the main reason publication order matters. The mysteries can often stand on their own, but the emotional architecture is cumulative.
The series begins with A Share in Death, which introduces Duncan as a Scotland Yard superintendent and Gemma as a sergeant, and the books quickly establish the contrast that gives the pair their energy. Duncan is often more intuitive, socially fluid, and willing to let the investigation breathe. Gemma is sharper-edged, more guarded, and often more disciplined in the way she approaches both work and emotion. Crombie uses that difference well. It never feels like a gimmicky opposites-attract pairing pasted onto a detective plot. Instead, it becomes the series’ central tension and one of its great strengths. They challenge each other professionally, and the long emotional movement between them is one of the chief rewards of reading in order.
Another thing that sets the series apart is its balance between professional detection and private consequence. Kincaid and Gemma do not live in a vacuum between cases. Family, children, work pressures, old loyalties, grief, fatigue, and the practical compromises of ordinary life all matter. Crombie is especially good at making that domestic continuity feel like an asset rather than a distraction. The home life in these books is not there to soften the murders. It is there to give them weight. The detectives are not simply brilliant minds moving from corpse to corpse. They are people trying to build something stable while repeatedly confronting the instability and violence in other people’s lives.
Publication order matters for another reason as well: the rank, experience, and emotional authority of both characters shift over time. Gemma’s development is especially important. She does not remain the junior partner or assistant figure in any static sense. She grows into her own full detective identity, and the series is stronger because Crombie lets that happen naturally. This is one of those detective lines where readers are not only following cases, but watching a woman claim professional and personal space over years of story.
The books also stand out for atmosphere. Crombie writes British police fiction, but not in a coldly procedural way. The settings matter a great deal, whether the novel is anchored in London, suburban neighborhoods, old institutions, churches, villages, or places carrying social and historical residue. Her mysteries are often less about ingenious trick construction than about the emotional and social worlds that make violence possible. Family strain, class pressure, old resentment, hidden love, and the burden of memory recur throughout the series. The crimes feel embedded in real human lives rather than arranged purely as puzzle mechanisms.
That gives the novels a slightly different texture from some classic detective series. They are not cosy, though they can be intimate. They are not hard-boiled, though they can be emotionally tough. They sit in a middle register that rewards readers who want character continuity alongside credible investigation. Crombie is patient with motive, and that patience helps the books age well. She is interested not only in who committed the crime, but in what emotional weather produced it.
For readers who already have the list above, the best way to think about Duncan Kincaid and Gemma James is as a true long-form detective partnership series. Read in publication order, the novels become more than a sequence of British murder investigations. They form the gradual, believable story of two detectives building trust, love, family, and professional respect while working in a world that keeps showing them how fragile those things can be.