Cooper & Fry book cover

The Cooper & Fry Series in Order

Cooper & Fry Books in Order

19 books
#
Title
Date
Rating
1
Oct 2000
6
May 2007
7
May 2008
8
May 2008
9
Apr 2009
10
Dec 2009
10
Dec 2011
11
Sep 2012
12
Apr 2013
13
Aug 2014
15
Sep 2015
16
Apr 2017
17
Sep 2018
18
Apr 2019

About the Cooper & Fry series

Series Premise

The series follows Detective Sergeant Diane Fry and Detective Constable Ben Cooper, two young detectives in Derbyshire Constabulary's CID (later CID teams in Edendale and the Peak District). Each book presents a standalone murder or major crime investigation—often involving rural or isolated settings—while the central tension comes from the uneasy professional and personal relationship between Fry and Cooper. Fry is ambitious, driven, and by-the-book; Cooper is intuitive, community-oriented, and empathetic toward locals. Their conflicting approaches—Fry's urban pragmatism vs. Cooper's rural understanding—create friction that drives both the cases and character development. Investigations frequently involve hidden motives, old secrets, family feuds, or tensions between incomers ("offcomers") and long-time residents. Overarching arcs track Fry and Cooper's careers (promotions, transfers, personal struggles), their evolving dynamic (from rivalry to reluctant respect, with hints of deeper connection), and the changing face of the Peak District (tourism, second homes, economic decline).

Main Characters

> Detective Constable/Sergeant/Inspector Ben Cooper: The heart of the series—young, local Derbyshire man, deeply connected to the land and people. Intuitive, empathetic, idealistic; often takes cases personally. Comes from a farming family (father was a police sergeant who died in the line of duty); lives with his mother and brother in a farmhouse. Grows from rookie to experienced officer; represents rural values and community ties.
> Detective Sergeant/Inspector Diane Fry: Cooper's foil and partner—ambitious, sharp, emotionally guarded. From the Black Country (Birmingham area), urban background; sees Cooper's local bias as a weakness. Driven, professional, haunted by her own troubled family past (abusive childhood, missing sister). Evolves from cold and career-focused to more vulnerable and reflective.
Supporting/recurring:
> Ben's family: Mother (Mrs. Cooper), brother Matt (farmer), sister-in-law; represent traditional rural life.
> Diane's sister (Carolyn Fry): Troubled, often in crisis; adds personal stakes for Diane.
> Detective Inspector Stewart Branagh / Superintendent Branagh: Early boss—gruff, pragmatic.
> DS Gavin Murfin: Older detective—cynical, snack-obsessed, comic relief.
> DC Carol Villiers: Later team member—ex-military, capable, becomes close to Cooper.
> Various suspects/victims: Locals, incomers, farmers, tourists—often complex, not purely evil.

Setting

The Peak District in Derbyshire, England—a national park of rugged moorland, limestone dales, stone villages, and dramatic landscapes (High Peak, White Peak, Dark Peak). The fictional town of Edendale serves as the main base—small, market-town feel with police station, pubs, and surrounding countryside. Cases often unfold in isolated farms, abandoned mines, reservoirs, hiking trails, tourist spots (Chatsworth-like estates), or remote hamlets. The setting is a major character: beautiful yet harsh—foggy moors, sudden weather changes, ancient stone circles, and the contrast between timeless rural beauty and modern pressures (second-home owners, tourism, rural crime). The Peak District represents both escape and entrapment—its isolation hides secrets, while its beauty draws outsiders who disrupt local life.

Tone & Themes

Atmospheric, introspective, and quietly dark—modern rural noir with psychological depth and understated melancholy. Booth's tone is realistic and somber: crimes are often brutal but described with restraint, investigations are methodical and detail-oriented, and the mood is reflective rather than sensational. There's little humor—dry irony or grim observations instead—while the writing is lyrical and evocative, especially in descriptions of landscape and weather. The series balances suspense with character exploration: Fry and Cooper's inner lives (Fry's guarded past, Cooper's family ties) add emotional weight, and resolutions are satisfying but bittersweet—justice is served, but not without cost. It's thoughtful and immersive—perfect for readers who enjoy slow-burn procedurals with a strong sense of place and human complexity, rather than fast-paced action or cozy lightness.

The Cooper & Fry series is a masterful modern rural noir—atmospheric, character-rich, and deeply rooted in the haunting beauty of the Peak District. Stephen Booth creates two compelling protagonists in Ben Cooper and Diane Fry: their contrasting approaches and evolving relationship provide the emotional core of a series that transcends standard procedurals. With 18 books of intelligent plotting, evocative landscapes, and thoughtful explorations of crime, community, and human nature, it's essential reading for fans of literary crime fiction (like Ian Rankin or Peter Robinson)—a quietly brilliant saga that rewards patience with rich rewards of suspense, character depth, and a profound sense of place. A standout in British crime writing.

FAQ

How many books are in the Cooper & Fry series?

19 books

When will the next book in the series be released?

No new book is currently scheduled. The latest book, Fall Down Dead, was published in April 2019.

When was the most recent book released?

Fall Down Dead was published in April 2019.

What was the first book in the series?

The first book in the series is Black Dog, published in October 2000.

What genre is the Cooper & Fry series?

The series primarily falls into the Police Procedural genre.

What is the Cooper & Fry series about?

The series follows Detective Sergeant Diane Fry and Detective Constable Ben Cooper, two young detectives in Derbyshire Constabulary's CID (later CID teams in Edendale and the Peak District). Each book presents a standalone murder or major crime investigation—often involving rural or isolated settings—while the central tension comes from the uneasy professional and personal relationship between Fry and Cooper. Fry is ambitious, driven, and by-the-book; Cooper is intuitive, community-oriented, and empathetic toward locals. Their conflicting approaches—Fry's urban pragmatism vs. Cooper's rural understanding—create friction that drives both the cases and character development. Investigations frequently involve hidden motives, old secrets, family feuds, or tensions between incomers ("offcomers") and long-time residents. Overarching arcs track Fry and Cooper's careers (promotions, transfers, personal struggles), their evolving dynamic (from rivalry to reluctant respect, with hints of deeper connection), and the changing face of the Peak District (tourism, second homes, economic decline).

Is the Cooper & Fry series finished?

The series does not currently have a new book scheduled.