A Season to Lie
by Emily Littlejohn (Minotaur, 2017) is the satisfying follow-up to this
series’ highly praised debut Inherit the Bones. Gemma Monroe returns from
maternity leave to her job with a small Colorado police force in a blinding
snowstorm, finding a stack of reports on a desk that she left completely
cleared three months earlier. Before she has time to review them and learn
what’s happened in her absence, she and her partner Finn respond to an
anonymous call about a prowler at a private school. Wondering who could
possibly want to be out on a night like this, Gemma and Finn rouse the security
firm to let them into the locked campus and circle the buildings, looking for
signs of entrance, theft, or vandalism. They find none, but Gemma does discover
the gruesomely dead body of an internationally known writer who was teaching
part-time at the school under an assumed name and an altered appearance.
Their investigation uncovers eccentric staff
members at the school with complex relationships and sets off a media firestorm.
One of the students reports extensive bullying among the students, instigated
by someone only known as Grimm. In addition, a putative construction group has
moved into town but the personnel look remarkably like members of organized
crime.
On the home front Gemma has still not married
Brody, the father of her baby, despite the urging of her friends and family.
His early infidelity has left her distrustful of him, no matter what he does. He’s
accepted a contract to write a textbook, which he can do while he looks after
Grace, allowing Gemma to return to work. He quickly becomes bored and
frustrated with full-time childcare, though. Sorting through and balancing
their individual needs perplexes Gemma while she enjoys the first few months of
her baby’s life, and she thrives on the intellectual stimulation of the
investigation.
Two more books in this very good police
procedural series have been published, and they are all well written, reliably
solid reads. The distinctive setting of Colorado provides great context for the
action, but the people are the strongest element. Gemma is a believably complex
person, surrounded by secondary characters no less well developed. This story
drops some clear hints about her future with Brody. Strongly recommended. Start
with the first book if at all possible.
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Hardcover: 304 pages
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Publisher: Minotaur
Books (November 14, 2017)
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Language: English
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ISBN-10: 1250089417
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ISBN-13: 978-1250089410
Aubrey Hamilton ©2020
Aubrey Hamilton is a former librarian who works on Federal It
projects by day and reads mysteries at night.
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