As one who used to work in the
public school system here, the premise on this one could easily happen.
The Bone House by Brian Freeman
Here's a psychological thriller done by
someone who knows how to write one. While basically a story of a man and wife,
the plot bleeds out to include a detective and and CSI analyst, some troubled
teenagers, and a terrible tragedy from the past. The tragedy, portrayed in the
breathtaking prologue, reaches lethal tentacles into the future and threatens
almost everyone involved.
Mark Bradley is having a tough time. He
and his wife, Hillary, moved to an idyllic island in rural Door County,
northern Wisconsin, from a Chicago suburb to live on their salaries as teachers
and raise a happy family. Mark, however, was accused of sexual harassment when
the mother of shy teenaged student, Tresa, read the torrid accounts of an
inappropriate affair in Tresa's diary. Tresa insisted her writings were all
fantasy, but Mark was fired anyway and has been out of a job for a year. His
wife, Hillary is still a dance coach at the high school, but her reception by
the locals has become increasingly chilly.
Mark accompanies his wife and her dance
students to Florida for a competition. It's supposed to be a relaxing getaway,
but Mark is accosted on the beach by Tresa's younger sister, Glory. When Glory
is found dead, a witness is found that saw Mark kissing Glory very late at
night. He insists they didn't kiss, and that he didn't kill the girl. Hillary
wants to believe him, but she's exhausted from standing by him during the
ordeal of the past year. And she's not quite sure he's telling the truth.
Cab (Born In One) Bolton, the unusual
detective assigned to the case, fights against his attraction to the lovely CSI
analyst, Lala. Like Hillary, he doesn't know who to believe. But he's Mark's
only hope. And he carries a horrific secret of his own from the past.
Reviewed by Kaye George Author of CHOKE: An Imogene Duckworthy Mystery for Suspense Magazine
Excellent review. Sounds like a good read: "... a thriller by someone who knows how to write one."
ReplyDeleteThanks! It was an easy book to review--terrific writing, plot, characters, everything.
ReplyDelete