Girl Number One
by
Jane Holland
Order:
USA
Can
Thomas & Mercer, 2016 (2016)
Softcover, CD, e-Book
Reviewed by Lyn Seippel
E
llie Blackwood, age twenty-four, finds a body in Eastlyn Woods in the exact place where her mother was murdered when Ellie was a child. Only when she reports the body and the police investigate, there is no body or any indication that there ever was a body.
R
ealistically the police might have reason to think she's unbalanced. Why would Ellie take a run in the woods on the anniversary of her mother's death? Even her dad doesn't believe she found a body. Of course, her dad has had few sober days since his wife's death. Fortunately, Ellie has friends who believe in her.
W
hen the police refuse to take her seriously, Ellie returns to the woods with her childhood friend, Tris, and together they come up with a possible explanation of how the body was stolen away before the police arrived. While verifying their theory they come up with a second body. This time, foolishly, Ellie refuses to leave the body until the police show up.
S
et in Cornwall, not far from the coast, Ellie's village has a foot in the past and the present. I especially liked the mention of the Jamaica Inn made famous by Daphne du Maurier's classic novel published in 1936. Ellie and her friend Connor have lunch there.
T
he disappearing body and Ellie's past as the daughter of an unsolved murder victim pull the reader in adroitly. Her willingness to suspect her friends comes a little too quickly to be realistic to me, but that's just a small bump in a good story with a skillful and satisfying plot.
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