Hey, everyone. I joined Net Galley a few years ago, but until recently hadn’t taken advantage of requesting many books until now.

Blurb

If you canā€™t trust your father and you canā€™t trust the police, who can you trust

Sue Hearn is planting a herb garden on the site of her grandfatherā€™s old greenhouse. Sheā€™s spent the morning digging up all sorts of odds and ends already. But she doesnā€™t expect this grisly find.

A skull.

Could it be the remains of her mother, Monica, who went missing thirty years ago?

Sueā€™s father, in hospital with dementia, insinuates that a police officer was involved in her motherā€™s disappearance. But can he be trusted?

So now Detectives Asha Harvey and Aaron Birch might be looking for a bent copper.

As they dig deeper into the past, Sue and Asha find secrets so dangerous it will put all their lives in danger.

My Review

Rating: 4 out of 5.

I always enjoy a good ā€œwho done itā€ story. After a friend recommended Small Bones, it sounded like it would deliver.

And it did.

Set in Belfast, this is the second book of Kerry Buchananā€™s Harvey & Birch Mysteries. While I havenā€™t read the first one, this could easily be a stand-alone novel.

When Sue Hearn discovers a skeleton at the site where her grandfatherā€™s greenhouse once stood, she fears someone in her family might have been responsible. It also brings back painful memories of her own motherā€™s disappearance thirty years earlier.

Detectives Asha Harvey and Aaron Birch are sent to investigate, but someone on the police force doesnā€™t want them to learn the truth. Whoever it is will stop at nothing to silence them.

Buchanan threw in plenty of breadcrumbs to keep readers guessing, and although the culpritā€™s identities are soon made known, itā€™s unclear who Asha and Aaron can trust. Whatā€™s more, the author left us with a twist at the end, the answer I hope will be explored in future books. I also enjoyed the relationship between Asha and Aaronā€”they make a great team.

A special thanks to Joffe Books at Net Galley for providing a free copy of this book in exchange for an honest review.

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32 Responses

    • This is probably the first book I’ve read that is set in Belfast. I thought the author did a good job depicting the location. Thanks, Priscilla.

  1. I enjoyed this story very much. I’d like to read the first one, too, and I’m very interested in seeing what happens in the third. I suspected that twist at the end. Didn’t want it to happen, but I had a feeling. Now I want to see how it all plays out.

    Great review.

    • I’ve recently started “taking advantage” of free books. Previously, I’d only reviewed copies of Mae Clair’s Hodes Hill Series. I’m trying to do more reading this year, so I look for bargains and freebies. šŸ™‚

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