Forgive
Me
by Daniel Palmer (Kensington, 2016) is a stand-alone thriller from my
Bouchercon book bag, which seems to have been light on genuine mysteries this
year. Angela DeRose’s investigation agency in Arlington, Virginia, specializes
in locating runaway children. Her interest in helping at-risk teens and their
families stems from the disappearance of her best friend in college just before
they graduated. No clue to her fate ever surfaced, and Angie is determined that
no other family will suffer the same sense of loss and grief if she can help it.
Workaholic Angie is
devastated when her mother dies suddenly. In sorting through her mother’s
possessions and papers, she finds an older photograph of a small child with the
words “Forgive me” and a string of numbers written on the back. Her father
doesn’t know anything about it and Angie is haunted by this secret in her
mother’s life. Her search for the child’s identity and the meaning of the
numbers on the back of the photo forms the overarching framework of the book.
The investigative work that leads Angie to the little girl’s name and location
is well done and the plot twist at the end that explains Angie’s mother’s connection
to the child is explosive, surprising, and plausible.
Nearly half of the
story however is consumed with the detailed and graphic description of the
seduction and coercion of a 16-year-old into a sex trafficking ring, and
Angie’s search for her. This unflinching narrative reads as if it were taken
from actual case records.
I find it interesting
that the publisher’s blurb makes no mention of the sex trafficking thread which
forms a significant part of the book, focusing only on the photo of the unidentified
little girl.
However, I had the
feeling that this is two separate stories folded into one book, one being
extraneous to the other, making it a mildly disorienting read. Action-packed
with physical and sexual violence.
·
Hardcover: 416 pages
·
Publisher: Kensington
(May 31, 2016)
·
Language: English
·
ISBN-10: 075829347X
·
ISBN-13: 978-0758293473
Aubrey
Hamilton ©2018
Aubrey
Hamilton is a former librarian who works on Federal It projects by day and
reads mysteries at night.
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