The Skeleton Box by Bryan Gruley is the
latest novel as part of the author’s “Starvation Lake” mystery series. Mysteries
and lies are ripping apart the small community in Michigan called Starvation
Lake, but sometimes the truth is better left hidden.
Book
Description
“Mysterious
break-ins are plaguing the small town of Starvation Lake. While elderly
residents enjoy their weekly bingo night at St. Valentine’s Catholic Church,
someone is slipping into their homes to rifle through financial and personal
files. Oddly, the intruder takes nothing—yet the “Bingo Night Burglaries” leave
the entire town uneasy.
Worry turns into panic when a break-in escalates
to murder. Suddenly, Gus Carpenter, editor of the Pine County Pilot, is forced to investigate the most
difficult story of his life. Not only is the victim his ex-girlfriend Darlene’s
mother, but her body was found in the home of Bea Carpenter—Gus’s own mother.
Suffering from worsening dementia and under the influence of sleeping pills,
Bea remembers little of the break-in.
With the help of Luke
Whistler, a former Detroit
Free Press reporter who came
north looking for slower days and some old-fashioned newspaper work, Gus sets
out to uncover the truth behind the murder. But when the story leads him to a
lockbox his mother has kept secret for years, Gus doesn’t realize that its
contents could forever change his perception of Starvation Lake, his own
family, and the value of the truth.” – The
Skeleton Box
My Thoughts
The Skeleton
Box is a good mystery novel set in a believable small town America
community. It features Gus Carpenter, the editor for the “Pilot” as being the reporter
to uncover the truth behind the mysterious break-ins going on in the town. The
plot is good, and I don’t want to give away very much from it – but it is somewhat
predictable.
The author does a very good job with bringing the
characters in the novel to life. You get a feel for them rather quickly, and
are involved in their story as the novel progresses. The setting captures the
feel for the area remarkably well, and both of these elements give the reader a
good overall impression of the story without too much extra prose describing
everything in minute detail.
I enjoyed this story, but not as much as I could
have. Something was just missing from it, and I’m not sure what exactly it was.
I didn’t read the previous two novels in the series (Starvation Lake and The
Hanging Tree), so perhaps that was it. Regardless of that though, I do recommend
it for mystery novel fans to read, as I’m sure you’d likely enjoy the story.
* Thank you
to the publisher of The Skeleton Box, Touchstone, for
providing me with a copy of this book for review. All opinions expressed are my
own.
1 comment:
I'll add all 3 to my wishlist but I think I'd read them in order to enjoy it more.
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