"Life is like a river. Life is absurd. The only constant is the water of change."
So we've come to the end for Angie, Maddocks, and even Holgerson. I for one, am not ready to say goodbye. This has been a fantastic series with tragedy, adversity, redemption, and more importantly, love. I've become so invested in the lives of Angie Pallorino and James Maddocks and what's to become of them, that I can't imagine letting go... walking away and never looking back. That's when you know the author has done their job. Loreth Anne White is an AMAZING author. Her descriptive writing is by far the best I have ever seen, her character development and dialogue are genuine. Every time I read a Loreth Anne White novel I feel bad for all the authors I read directly following it because I can't help but compare. When Loreth Anne White writes a novel, she puts everything she has in it, and you can tell. I can't thank her enough for giving me something to look forward to, and something to get lost in with every novel.
With The Girl in the Moss, we find Angie picking up the pieces following her termination and still coming to terms with no longer being a cop. Being a cop was the one thing about Angie that was truly Angie. With Maddocks receiving a recent promotion, this only adds to Angie's feelings of inferiority, and she can't help but feel a bit of resentment. Maddocks decides to take Angie on a getaway to the Nahamish river for a four-day guided trip for some fly fishing and relaxation, where he eventually pops the question. Only the getaway doesn't go exactly as planned. The body of a young woman is discovered in a mossy loam having been washed up there during a flood in previous years.
Angie catches a big break and lands the case... her first P.I. case. Of course, it wasn't easy, as nothing is ever easy for Angie. The remains turn out to belong to Jasmine Gulati, the granddaughter of Judge Jilly Monaghan. Jasmine had been at the Nahamish river all those years ago for a documentary trip for fly fishing, it was titled Women in the Stream. To this day, no one knows exactly what happened to Jasmine during this trip, but it was suspected that she slipped, fell into the river, and went over the falls and drowned. Judge Monaghan wants answers, she wants to know about some of the events that lead up to Jasmine's last days. She asks Angie to find these answers for her. Angie heads back out to the Port Ferris area to find out what happened to Jasmine Gulati on the Nahamish River.
As Angie continues her investigation, she discovers that the people in the small town of Port Ferris are hiding more than just the answers to what happened to Jasmine Gulati, and that they'll stop at nothing to keep those secrets buried.
There were a few disappointing things with the conclusion to this series, one, we didn't get to see much of Maddocks in this one, two, I didn't get to know Holgerson as much as I had hoped. I had hoped that at some point in the series that we would get to understand a bit more about Holgerson's character. Then again, I now see that his character is to remain mysterious. Lastly, I would have liked to see Leo get what was coming to him. I feel that there was unfinished business with Leo. All that said, as with any series... there will always be a bit of disappointment and unfinished business.
I want to thank NetGalley, Montlake Romance, and Loreth Anne White for allowing me the opportunity to read this novel in exchange for my review. It was absolutely a delight as always.