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Inherit the Bones

A Detective Gemma Monroe Mystery, Book 1

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“I couldn't put down Inherit the Bones. Small town Colorado police detective Gemma Monroe is a human and fallible heroine I can't wait to meet again, and Littlejohn's prose is lyrical and gripping - the book - is a sure bet for one of the finest debut novels of the year.” (Deborah Crombie)

Secrets and lies can’t stay buried forever in Cedar Valley.

In the summer, hikers and campers pack the small Colorado town’s meadows and fields. And in the winter, skiers and snowboarders take over the mountains. Season by season, year after year, time passes, and the lies, like the aspens and evergreens that surround the town, take root and spread deep.

Now, someone has uncovered the lies, and it is his murder that continues a chain of events that began almost 40 years ago. Detective Gemma Monroe’s investigation takes her from the seedy grounds of a traveling circus to the powerful homes of those who would control Cedar Valley’s future.

Six months pregnant, with a partner she can’t trust and colleagues who know more than they’re saying, Gemma tracks a killer who will stop at nothing to keep those secrets buried.

Beautifully written, with a riveting plot and a richly drawn cast of characters, Inherit the Bones is a mesmerizing debut from Emily Littlejohn.

©2016 Emily Littlejohn (P)2019 Vibrance Press
Detective Fiction Mystery Police Procedural Women Sleuths Women's Fiction Exciting Hiking
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I’m so sorry to say this book is kind of awful. It’s like it’s been written by someone who has read too many similar books and lived no life. The main character is a caricature of a female detective lead, who speaks in utterly bizarre overly contemplative cliches. It isn’t helped by the narrator, who for some reason reads her like she’s always looking across the ocean on a misty autumn evening. The story is fine, disappointing in the end but interesting enough. I never leave reviews but this was really a struggle to get through. I hope someone else enjoys it much more, but it’s not for me.

Juvenile writing terribly narrated

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