Sunday, November 09, 2025

Review: Innocence Road by Laura Griffin


Comes out Tuesday....


Innocence Road by Laura Griffin takes readers to far Southwest Texas in the Big Bend region and the small town of Madrone in Chisos County. This read reminded me a lot of the Josie Gray Mystery series by Tricia Fields. Innocence Road is also a very good police procedural in its own right.

 

Leanne Everhart was saved from cleaning out her old garage when she is sent to a location to meet Officer Will Akers. He had been in a local Texaco getting a cup of coffee while on patrol when a woman came into the place and told the young officer with six weeks on the job that she had found a body. Patty Paulson is a member of the Desert Angels. A group that puts jugs of water in the desert to try and save lives.

 

Everhart goes over to the nearby area of train tracks where they cross a bone-dry small culvert and verifies that there most definitely is a body in the culvert under the short railroad bridge. The body has been there awhile. Buzzards are overhead and it is obvious that animals and other things in nature have been at work doing what they do with the dead. But, no animal smashed in the right side of the young dead woman’s head hard enough to cave it in with shards of bone sticking up through her hair.

 

After spending eight years in Dallas, Everhart is back home where she grew up. In some ways that is a good thing. In other ways it is not, as she is again reminded that in the small town of Madrone, everybody knows everybody. They also know all your business and have an opinion on that as well as an opinion on everyone in your family going back decades.  

 

It is January, tourist season, and news of the discovery spreads like a wildfire. Not only are there plenty of tourists in town, there are also plenty of reporters. Reporters that want to know what she thinks and knows about the release of Sean Moroarty from Huntsville Prison where he had been serving a life sentence without parole.

 

That was until new evidence came out that his confession was coerced. Jim McBride, the current Chief of Police, was the senior detective on the murder case of 18-year-old Hannah Rawls. Her dad was also on the case. Both men were in the room when he confessed. Suspicion of wrongdoing is landing primarily on her dad who is no longer among the living and therefore can’t defend himself.

 

As part of her dad’s legacy in law enforcement in the area, she is feeling a lot of pressure over what may or may not have happened. The idea that her dad would do such a thing is unthinkable, though her mom does not seem to share that same opinion. That family legacy and division is just one piece of the secondary storyline involving the release of Sean Moriarty. A release that has huge repercussions for several characters in the read.

 

That case also affects the here and now as Chief McBride wants to write off the dead woman beneath the railroad tracks as just another dead migrant in the desert. Resources and funds are scarce and he does not want to waste them on a dead migrant in the desert as that sort of thing happens all the time. It is a way of life and just how things are. He wants the bare minimum done and to close the books on the case as soon as possible. As she investigates, and deals with his constant questioning of her abilities, she becomes increasingly convinced that there is actually a serial killer at work in the area. One that has been active going back many years.

 

What follows is a complicated police procedural with a cast of interesting characters. Rich in setting details, depth of characters both primary and secondary, and a complicated primary and secondary storylines, the resulting Innocence Road by Laura Griffin, becomes a highly entertaining police procedural read. One hopes it is the start of a series.

 

Strongly Recommended.



 

Amazon Associate Purchase Link: https://amzn.to/4hHr0kc

 

 

My digital ARC was provided by the publisher, Berkley, through NetGalley, with no expectation of a positive review.

 

Kevin R. Tipple ©2025

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