I received an advance review copy for free, and I am leaving this review voluntarily.
This was, over all, a fast, fun read - I read it in it's entirety over one Sunday.
I was drawn to reading this novel because it is set in Vancouver, a city that I have visited, and it is written by a Vancouverite. Being honest, on my few trips to Vancouver, I have not understood what it is about the city that so many people seem to love - it regularly tops "best city" lists, but, and I admit I haven't spent long there nor have I been there very recently - I find it to be a bit dirty, noisy, and (maybe I've just been to the wrong neighbourhoods and listen to the news too much) struggling with a homeless population with drug addiction as a significant problem. At the same time you hear about very expensive properties being purchased. It is a multi-cultural city, one of the things that I remember from an early passing visit is going to a Mongolian restaurant (long before such restaurants popped into being in my home city.) It is famous for Stanley Park, a sea-fronting downtown public green space, (which, unless I missed it, gets no mention in the book.) It seems to me that Vancouver is a complex city with significant cultural, ethnic, racial and economic diversity. As someone who now lives in the interior of British Columbia, it also feels like it's politics are a world apart from the rest of the province.
I was hoping to be brought into Vancouver as a place more than I was during this novel. I was hoping to have explained to me, through the characters, what makes it such a loveable place to many.
I was disappointed that I didn't get that - and especially disappointed that I didn't get as much of a flavour of Vancouver today as I did of Vancouver yesterday. I feel that there was an opportunity lost there, and an opportunity to highlight the contrast and similarities between historic Vancouver and Vancouver today. Both main characters in this book must love the city - I wish they would have shown that more to me.
I also found a few instances of details that seemed to be minorly inconsistent within the story, but that may have just been due to me not concentrating fully at all times. There may have been some minor grammar faults, but then again, maybe not, my grammar isn't perfect!
There were a few moments when I felt like Riley, the modern character, was surprisingly ignorant about how Jack the character from the past would react to certain things, particularly since she is an archivist working at a museum and is presumably into history. (She didn't think that he would assume someone suddenly writing to him named Riley was a guy??!!)
On the plus side, this was an easy book to read, with pace, and there were some unexpected twists that took me by surprise . I'm not sure I agree with what Riley says about the bad guy at the end of the book, but that's okay.
Overall, this was an entertaining, quick-read mystery and I wish the debut author all the best as she expands the series.