Summary:
Told by a tart-tongued young woman with a love of Bruce Springsteen, Lies in Bone is at once a mystery and coming-of-age tale fueled by dark secrets involving love, murder, and the truths worth lying for.
On Halloween 1963, eleven-year-old Chuck Coolidge and his brother Danny are lost in a toxic smog covering the steel town of Slippery Elm, Pennsylvania. When the smog lifts, half the town is sick and twenty people are dead. And Danny is missing.
Now, over twenty years later, Chuck's teenage daughter Frank plots escape from this "busted and disgusted" town. When a murdered child is found in the river, investigators link the crime to the disappearance of Danny in '63, and Frank's life is turned upside down. In the face of her worst fears, she must uncover her family's dark past if she wants to keep her sister Boots from the hands of The State. Led to discover the unimaginable truth about Danny's disappearance, Lies in Bone culminates in a shocking eleventh-hour reveal and an emotionally charged finale.
My take:
This story was beautifully written. Once I found out the author also writes plays- it made perfect sense- she can describe a scene with such detail, you feel you are there.
The characters are well developed, especially the main character, 16 year old Francis, better known as Frank. She is a no-nonsense, feisty girl who says whatever is on her mind. She has grown up as Mom to her much younger sister, Boots. Their mother left right after Boots was born and their father is a raging alcoholic who loves his girls, but is basically incapable of caring for them. Frank shoulders the responsibility for it all. She has had to grow up fast and learn how to survive with little help.
This is a very character-driven story, I wouldn’t call it a thriller. There was a mystery and there were twists, but it was a slow burn getting to the investigation and answers. The second half moved much faster than the first. As the mystery wrapped up, the twists were very clever, and I was really surprised by a couple of them.
Overall, this is a gritty and heartbreaking story of abandoned youth and a sister’s love. 3.6 rounded up to 4 stars.