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Ethan Brand #2

A Lonesome Place for Murder: An Ethan Brand Mystery, Book 2

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In this dark mystery, perfect for fans of C. J. Box, one wrong step leads Ethan Brand to the most dangerous case of his career . . . and the most personal.

Hoping to surprise his sons, Ethan Brand, the chief of police of a small town in northern Washington state, is contemplating buying a horse. But when the horse literally stumbles upon an abandoned smuggling tunnel, Ethan and his lead investigator Brenda Lee Page discover a dead body connected to a decade-old mystery.

Ten years ago, Tyler Rash, a troubled friend of Ethan's, vanished without a trace. The body in the tunnel has Tyler's ID and personal effects.

As Ethan and Brenda Lee investigate Tyler’s disappearance, they follow a trail that leads them to a cross-border smuggling operation connected to the town's notorious family of smugglers. And when a bomb is sent to Ethan's own house, the case takes a deadly and personal turn. A killer is stalking Ethan Brand—a killer he’ll have to face if he wants to see his family again.

Audible Audio

Published August 26, 2025

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60 people want to read

About the author

Nolan Chase

2 books32 followers
Nolan Chase lives and works in the Pacific Northwest. A Lonesome Place for Dying is his first book featuring Ethan Brand.

source: Amazon

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 32 reviews
Profile Image for TheConnieFox.
448 reviews
April 15, 2025
A Lonesome Place for Murder is book 2 of an Ethan Brand mystery series. This was a dark fictional mystery book that kept me engaged! It had both likable and unlikable characters in it, a well rounded plot and kept me wanting more of this detective mystery! I didn’t want it to end. Even though I wanted more, this book was ended up well executed. The main character Ethan Brand is a likable character, so I understood why the author wrote a second book! I am hoping that there will be a third one coming out as well.

The horse that Ethan Brand thinks about buying comes across a smuggling tunnel that had been abandoned. Him and his lead investigator end up finding a dead body there and that’s when things get really scary! This body identification is someone that Ethan knew many years ago. As the story unfolds, there are twists and turns you don’t see coming! Sinister things start to happen to Ethan! It is about a smuggling operation! I highly recommend this book to anyone that enjoys reading a great mystery with some thriller! Be sure to check out the trigger warnings before reading this book. I give this a 4 out of 5 star rating!

Thank you to NetGalley, author Nolan Chase and Crooked Lane Books for this digital advanced reader’s copy of this book in exchange for my honest review. All thoughts and opinions are my own.

This book is expected to be published on August 26, 2025!
Profile Image for Donne.
1,545 reviews95 followers
May 20, 2025
I discovered this series last year and thought it sounded like my kind of story: small town Sheriff dealing with small town crime up on the border of WA and Canada. The MC, Sheriff Ethan Brand, was likeable enough character and Blaine WA seemed like a small town with some questionable elements that could make for a good story or two. I was hesitant to continue the series after the first installment, but I’m glad I did. I liked this second installment a lot more than the first one. Sometimes it takes more than one installment for a good series to take off.

The gangs all back for this one. Sheriff Ethan, who has his two sons for the summer, is looking to surprise them with a horse and asks his deputy, Brenda Lee, to come along and help him pick one out. Brenda Lee is second in command and was also Ethan’s opponent in the last election for Sheriff. Needless to say, Brenda Lee thinks she would have been a better Sheriff and likes to remind Ethan of that frequently. It’s while trying to catch a runaway horse in an empty field that Brenda Lee literally stumbles onto an underground tunnel when she crashes down into it and finds a corpse.

The book summary introduces the primary storyline of the dead body being Tyler Rash, a homeless kid that Ethan’s parents took in for a while when Ethan and Tyler were teenagers. There was some bad history between Ty and Ethan because Ethan’s dad, a hard-core survivalist, always favored Ty over Ethan and made it very clear that Ty was the son that he always wished for. Anyway, because of the personal connection to the victim, Ethan has to pass the case onto Brenda Lee, who is just a little too happy about and is just loving bossing Ethan around a little too much – at first. It’s not long before it becomes clear why Ethan became Sheriff and not Brenda Lee.

There was also kind of a secondary storyline surrounding the mayoral election that was coming up soon. The current mayor, Eldon Mooney, was an old, rich, conservative, corrupt, racist, misogynistic, jerk from the old boys club and Mooney’s opponent was Arlene Six Crows, a younger, progressive, city councilwoman, as well as a woman of color. Mooney didn’t like that Ethan, the Sheriff, was promoting and campaigning for Arlene and political tensions were rising in the small town of Blaine and Arlene was becoming a target.

Most of the story covers the present-day investigation, with some flashbacks to the past when Ty lived with Ethan and his family as well as after Ethan’s dad went missing and then again after Ethan came back from Afghanistan, broken and busted up (minus a foot) and grieving his mother’s recent death. Ty’s mother, who abandoned him when he was a teenager, is tracked down and appears to have had some contact with him over the years, after he was grown and on his own. Needless to say, she was a piece of work.

The continuing character development of Ethan and his officers was good. I enjoyed the odd and sometimes tenuous interactions between Ethan and Von, a Seattle DEA agent, who was assigned to work with Ethan and his team in the investigation of the tunnel for possible smuggling activities. Von was a bit of a bad@$$ character, my fave kind of female characters. She also became somewhat of a love interest for the single and lonely Sheriff. The pacing was steady, which was something I especially enjoyed more than the first installment that tended to drag a little too much for my liking. The storyline was interesting, especially after Ethan began to suspect that the scene was not what it seemed, based on what he knew and remembered about Ty. The writing was good too, I liked how Chase kept the characters, as well as myself, guessing until almost the ending.

I’m looking at an overall rating of 4.1 that I will be rounding down to a 4star review. I want to thank NetGalley and Crooked Lane Books for sending me this eARC in exchange for my honest review.

#NetGalley #CrookedLaneBooks #ALonsomePlaceforMurder
Profile Image for Marianne.
4,404 reviews341 followers
August 29, 2025
A Lonesome Place for Murder is the second book to feature Ethan Brand by award-winning Canadian-born author, Sam Wiebe, writing as Nolan Chase. The audio version is narrated by Kevin T Collins. Blaine Police Chief, Ethan Brand and his most senior officer, Brenda Lee Page are at the Steranko horse ranch to see a potential purchase when they make an accidental discovery: a tunnel, and therein, a body.

Ethan is mentally listing all that needs to be done to protect the scene, and which law enforcement agencies need to be involved due to the proximity to the Canadian border. It looks as though the male shooting victim in the tunnel has been there for a decade, and when the wallet in his pocket identifies him as Tyler Rash, Ethan puts Brenda Lee in charge of the investigation as his history with Tyler presents an impartiality issue.

The fatherless issue of a teen pregnancy, Ty came into Ethan’s life when they were both teens, when Ethan was a disappointment to his rabidly survivalist father. Jack Brand saw Ty as the kind of son he really wanted. Ty later lived with the Sterankos for a time. For Ethan, the case resurrects memories, many unhappy, of being bullied by both Ty and the father he couldn’t please, the man who went missing almost thirty years earlier.

At a meeting in Blaine’s Police HQ between representatives of the Washington State Patrol, the RCMP, the Border Patrol, ICE, the ADA, and DEA, many questions are raised, both about the tunnel and the victim. Although it stopped short of the border, the unfinished tunnel might have been intended to smuggle drugs, prescription pills, cigarettes or alcohol, cash, firearms and explosives, or for human trafficking.

Who built it? When attractive DEA agent Vonetta Briggs describes the likely builder as “Well-trained in wilderness survival, something of a loner, dangerous enough he can take care of himself, and proficient with explosives”, Ethan realises this perfectly describes Tyler Rash. Were Blaine’s McCandless family, known drug smugglers, also involved?

The more he considers the murder scene, the less Ethan is convinced that the victim is actually Tyler, whom he believes too mistrustful and too aware of his surroundings to end up shot in the back: does this then mean he is the killer?

As well as the usual demands on his time as Police Chief, Ethan has a pile of overdue Officer Fitness Reports to complete, and both the current mayor, Eldon Mooney, and his opponent in the upcoming election, City Councillor Arlene Six Crows (“not white, not rich, and not a man”), expect his support as candidate of choice, something that sees him as the unlikely host of a book club evening.

During the course of the investigation, Ethan is distracted by the separate attentions of two attractive women with whom it might be rather dangerous to get involved, while feeling heartbroken over the finality of his split with his ex. The harassment of Councillor Six Crows: campaign signs stolen, her car vandalised, is a concern, as is the letter bomb Ethan finds in his mailbox.

There’s quite a bit of smart deductive work by Ethan and his team, some of whom get injured in a melee. Before matters are eventually resolved, there is another tunnel, an explosion, and reinforcements choppered in. Ethan is spat on, insulted, caught in a snare, hunted down, shot at and threatened.

Ethan is an interesting protagonist, a lawman with integrity, insight and intelligence, and a few quirks that will endear him to the reader. In this instalment, he buys a horse, goes on a date, prevents a suicide, and has to start looking for new officers as two in whom he places his greatest trust are set to depart.

Chase again gives the reader cleverly-plotted crime fiction with a few twists and surprises, entertaining dialogue, a dramatic climax and a very satisfactory resolution. His characters can be wise and observant: Ethan’s former boss “Nothing’s ever really in your control”, while Ethan muses “You work so hard not to repeat the mistakes of your parents. Instead, you make all new mistakes. And you lose them just the same as your parents lost you.” Chase easily evokes his setting, Jerry Todd’s cover is striking, there is plenty of scope for further books in this location, and more of this cast would be most welcome.
This unbiased review is from an audio copy provided by NetGalley and Highbridge Audio.
Profile Image for Tina Loves To Read.
3,443 reviews1 follower
October 30, 2025
This is Suspense/Mystery, and this is the second book in An Ethan Brand Mystery series. I have not read the first book in this series before picking up this book. It took me a little to get into this story, but I really enjoyed this book after I got pulled into it. I received an ARC of this book. This review is my own honest opinion about the book like all my reviews are.
Profile Image for Nancy McFarlane.
869 reviews188 followers
September 26, 2025
Who knew that going to buy a horse for his kids  would put Ethan Brand in the middle of a ten year old murder case? A Lonesome Place for Murder is another great police procedural and a deeper look into Brands’ past.
Profile Image for Cindi.
1,462 reviews4 followers
August 31, 2025
Thank you to the author, narrator, publisher and Net Galley for providing an ALC.

This is book 2 in a series, and I haven't read others by the author or the previous book in the series. Even with not knowing the previous book, I found the book interesting and don't' feel like I missed anything.

This book was engaging with likable and unlikable characters, dark fiction mystery, and very compelling to read. Narration of the audiobook is well done and helps the story come to life.

Anyone looking for a police procedural, dual time lines, set in the Pacific Northwest would enjoy this one.

3.5 stars.
474 reviews8 followers
October 12, 2025
This was my first outing with the characters despite this being book 2 of a series. It was a high quality audio book with clear character distinction and an easy to follow plot. I did enjoy this it was well paced and the mystery was told well and the ending was a satisifying conclusion . It worked for me as a standalone story although i feel my experience could have been improved by reading book 1. the characters themselves were well narrated and their history was fed into the story . The plot was full of twists and was engaging from start to finish. fair quick listen and a good solid plots. perfect for mystery lovers .thanks to netgallery, publisher, author and narrator.
Profile Image for Marianne.
4,404 reviews341 followers
August 29, 2025
A Lonesome Place for Murder is the second book to feature Ethan Brand by award-winning Canadian-born author, Sam Wiebe, writing as Nolan Chase. Blaine Police Chief, Ethan Brand and his most senior officer, Brenda Lee Page are at the Steranko horse ranch to see a potential purchase when they make an accidental discovery: a tunnel, and therein, a body.

Ethan is mentally listing all that needs to be done to protect the scene, and which law enforcement agencies need to be involved due to the proximity to the Canadian border. It looks as though the male shooting victim in the tunnel has been there for a decade, and when the wallet in his pocket identifies him as Tyler Rash, Ethan puts Brenda Lee in charge of the investigation as his history with Tyler presents an impartiality issue.

The fatherless issue of a teen pregnancy, Ty came into Ethan’s life when they were both teens, when Ethan was a disappointment to his rabidly survivalist father. Jack Brand saw Ty as the kind of son he really wanted. Ty later lived with the Sterankos for a time. For Ethan, the case resurrects memories, many unhappy, of being bullied by both Ty and the father he couldn’t please, the man who went missing almost thirty years earlier.

At a meeting in Blaine’s Police HQ between representatives of the Washington State Patrol, the RCMP, the Border Patrol, ICE, the ADA, and DEA, many questions are raised, both about the tunnel and the victim. Although it stopped short of the border, the unfinished tunnel might have been intended to smuggle drugs, prescription pills, cigarettes or alcohol, cash, firearms and explosives, or for human trafficking.

Who built it? When attractive DEA agent Vonetta Briggs describes the likely builder as “Well-trained in wilderness survival, something of a loner, dangerous enough he can take care of himself, and proficient with explosives”, Ethan realises this perfectly describes Tyler Rash. Were Blaine’s McCandless family, known drug smugglers, also involved?

The more he considers the murder scene, the less Ethan is convinced that the victim is actually Tyler, whom he believes too mistrustful and too aware of his surroundings to end up shot in the back: does this then mean he is the killer?

As well as the usual demands on his time as Police Chief, Ethan has a pile of overdue Officer Fitness Reports to complete, and both the current mayor, Eldon Mooney, and his opponent in the upcoming election, City Councillor Arlene Six Crows (“not white, not rich, and not a man”), expect his support as candidate of choice, something that sees him as the unlikely host of a book club evening.

During the course of the investigation, Ethan is distracted by the separate attentions of two attractive women with whom it might be rather dangerous to get involved, while feeling heartbroken over the finality of his split with his ex. The harassment of Councillor Six Crows: campaign signs stolen, her car vandalised, is a concern, as is the letter bomb Ethan finds in his mailbox.

There’s quite a bit of smart deductive work by Ethan and his team, some of whom get injured in a melee. Before matters are eventually resolved, there is another tunnel, an explosion, and reinforcements choppered in. Ethan is spat on, insulted, caught in a snare, hunted down, shot at and threatened.

Ethan is an interesting protagonist, a lawman with integrity, insight and intelligence, and a few quirks that will endear him to the reader. In this instalment, he buys a horse, goes on a date, prevents a suicide, and has to start looking for new officers as two in whom he places his greatest trust are set to depart.

Chase again gives the reader cleverly-plotted crime fiction with a few twists and surprises, entertaining dialogue, a dramatic climax and a very satisfactory resolution. His characters can be wise and observant: Ethan’s former boss “Nothing’s ever really in your control”, while Ethan muses “You work so hard not to repeat the mistakes of your parents. Instead, you make all new mistakes. And you lose them just the same as your parents lost you.” Chase easily evokes his setting, Jerry Todd’s cover is striking, there is plenty of scope for further books in this location, and more of this cast would be most welcome.
This unbiased review is from an uncorrected proof copy provided by NetGalley and Crooked Lane Books.
Profile Image for Kevintipple.
914 reviews21 followers
September 1, 2025
A Lonesome Place for Murder: An Ethan Brand Mystery by Nolan Chase is the sequel to A Lonesome Place for Dying. It, like that first book, is a really good read. You could read this one first, if you wanted, but why do that as the series is a good one and should be read in order like all good series.

As this book begins, Chief of Police Ethan Brand and Deputy Brenda Lee Page are slogging it out as they hike through a pasture. The mission is to find an old man and a certain horse. Both work for the small town of Blaine, Washington, near the border with Canada. They might not be the ones even out there now except for the fact that Chief of Police Brand is thinking about buying the horse. He had an appointment to see the horse and brought Deputy Brenda Lee Page with him, on her day off, as support as she knows animals. Not that she knows much about horses.

Brand’s ex and the kids live in Boston now and the most recent visitation did not go as well as he would have hoped. Both of his sons during the summer visitation were too immersed in their electronic devices when they were not actively doing something. That is except for one afternoon when they were able to interact with a horse in its trailer. The Christmas visitation is coming up and Brand is thinking that maybe a horse would help things. He wants his young sons to be present in the world and understand that there are things that matter far more than chatting online and playing videogames. He is feeling a growing gap between his sons and himself and is having a hard time with the dawning realization that his ex and his sons aren’t going to come back home.

The muddy and wet pasture they are slogging through has a slope to it as it sits parallel to the Canadian border. It is where they were sent by the owner’s wife to go check on him as he is overdue for getting back to the house. The slope and the wet ground are working Brand’s surgically repaired left foot and causing him increasing pain as he climbs steadily higher up the slope. The man they are looking for is Mac Steranko. Once they finally the crest and can look down the other side, towards the border, they can see him sitting on the ground near a patch of disturbed ground.



The elderly Mr. Steranko is a tough man and lucky to be alive. He is a bit banged up as is the horse, Trim Reckoning. It is favoring a leg and is a bit spooked by the hole in the ground. Mr. Steranko explains that the horse stumbled hard because a patch of ground suddenly gave way under it.

Even more ground gives way when Brenda Lee starts poking around and accidentally causes a bigger collapse. One that dumps her several feet down into a hole that is now several feet long. In fact, this is not a hole, but a partial tunnel collapse.

Back a few years earlier, Brand was in the military. One of his duties in the Helmand Province of Afghanistan was clearing tunnels. The last thing he wants to do is go down in that tunnel. But, when Brenda Lee finds a body in there that has been there for quite some time, he doesn’t have a choice.

A body that soon means quite a lot to Ethan Brand in more ways than one.

What follows is another highly entertaining and complicated read in this great series. Not only do they have a murder to solve, local politics is heating up, his ex has plans that don’t involve him, and history is rearing its ugly head. Much is going on professionally and personally and Ethan Brand is a bit like the dogged prize fighter that takes body blow and head shot, one after another, with barely any time to breathe as he leans against the ropes. Backed in a corner every which way, all he can do is keep his head down, and keep dodging that fatal blow. Or that head shot as the case may be.

A Lonesome Place for Murder: An Ethan Brand Mystery by Nolan Chase is a mighty good read. Very much strongly recommended as it is well worth your time.


My digital ARC reading copy came from the publisher, Crooked Lane Books, through NetGalley, with no expectation of a review.



Kevin R. Tipple ©2025
Profile Image for J Kromrie.
2,498 reviews48 followers
July 16, 2025
Thanks to the publisher and Netgalley for this eARC.

In A Lonesome Place for Murder, Nolan Chase doesn’t just deliver a mystery—he orchestrates a psychological symphony set against the haunting backdrop of rural isolation. This isn’t your average whodunit. It’s a meditation on solitude, memory, and the moral ambiguity that festers in forgotten corners of the American landscape.

Ethan Brand is not the kind of protagonist who solves puzzles with swagger. He’s a man worn thin by grief and guilt, navigating a case that feels less like a murder investigation and more like a reckoning. Chase crafts Brand with remarkable restraint—his silences speak louder than his interrogations, and his internal monologue is laced with philosophical weight. He’s not chasing justice; he’s chasing clarity in a world that resists it.

The titular “lonesome place” is more than scenery—it’s a psychological terrain. The small town, with its decaying barns, fog-choked woods, and whispers of old sins, becomes a living entity. Chase’s prose evokes a kind of gothic Americana, where every shadow seems to carry a secret. The isolation isn’t just geographical—it’s emotional, generational, and deeply personal.

Chase employs a slow-burn structure that rewards patience. The pacing is deliberate, almost meditative, allowing readers to sink into the atmosphere before the plot begins to twist. When the revelations come, they’re not explosive—they’re quietly devastating. The mystery unfolds like a memory being unearthed, piece by painful piece.

A Lonesome Place for Murder is a story about the cost of silence. The murder is merely the catalyst for exploring deeper questions: What do we owe the dead? What truths are we willing to bury to preserve the illusion of peace? Chase doesn’t offer easy answers. Instead, he invites readers to sit with discomfort, to examine the spaces between justice and forgiveness.

A Lonesome Place for Murder is a masterclass in mood and moral complexity. Nolan Chase doesn’t just write mysteries—he writes elegies for forgotten souls. This is a book for readers who crave depth over dazzle, and who understand that sometimes, the most lonesome places are the ones we carry inside.
Profile Image for Kathy Martin.
4,152 reviews115 followers
July 30, 2025
The second Ethan Brand mystery has Ethan taking a look at his past. When he is looking at a horse to buy for his sons, the horse stumbles into a tunnel built on an isolated ranch. Exploring the tunnel leads to a body with a wallet giving the name of Tyler Rash.

Tyler had been taken in by Ethan's family when he was a boy. Ethan's dad Jack really bonded with Tyler since they were both outdoorsmen and survivalists. Finding what looks to be his body, Ethan is faced with his relationship with his father who disappeared into the wilderness when Ethan was a teenager.

But, when Chief Deputy Brenda Lee discovers that the body is not Tyler's, the mystery deepens. It makes Ethan wonder if Tyler is still alive out there somewhere. A visiting DEA Agent is also wondering if Tyler is still out there since the tunnel mirrors other smuggler's tunnels that she has investigated.

Ethan is also involved in the local race for mayor since he has had a bad relationship with the current mayor since firing his corrupt nephew and admires the woman who is running against him. Stolen campaign signs and harassment of the candidate opposing the mayor takes up some of his time too.

When a letter bomb is delivered to Ethan's house, he knows he's getting close to something but isn't sure exactly what.

This was an intriguing mystery. I really like Ethan Brand's character. He's a Vet who came home from Afghanistan with a prosthetic and oxy addiction but managed to straighten up to become the Sheriff. He's dealing with the fact that his wife left him and took his sons to Boston. He's had some relationships including one with a married woman who decided to go back to her husband. And he has a sort of relationship with Sissy McCandless who is running the biggest crime family in the area.

I liked the story and look forward to more in the series.
Profile Image for Cathy Geha.
4,337 reviews118 followers
August 11, 2025
A Lonesome Place for Murder by Nolan Chase
An Ethan Brand Mystery #2

~ Dark, gritty, immersive ~ Great addition to the series ~ Couldn’t put it down~

What I Liked:
* Ethan Brand: Police Chief, ex-Marine, wounded in battle, separated two years from his wife and two sons who live on the East Coast, cool, calm, lethal, thoughtful, intriguing, hooked - want to get to know him better and find out where life takes him
* The small-town community and all of the small town issues that crop up
* The police procedural aspects of the murder mystery and the way clues were unearthed
* Characters were believable and very human
* Watching Ethan deal with being police chief while also navigating being single, missing his family, dealing with loneliness, and the women that come into his life
* Learning more about Ethan’s backstory, father, a young man that lived with his family for a while, his military experience, book club, and more
* The mystery of who the bones in the tunnel were, the importance of tunnels in the story, and the link back to Ethan’s childhood
* Getting to know the supporting characters better
* The plot, pacing, setting, and writing – especially some of the twists toward the end
* That I cared about the outcome and the impact that it had on more than one character in the story
* That the mystery was solved and tied up with a bow – no cliffhanger
* All of it rally except…

What I didn’t like:
* Who and what I was meant not to like
* Thinking about nature vs nurture and how much of both impacted how some of the characters in this book turned out

Did I enjoy this book? Yes
Would I read more in this series? Yes

Thank you to NetGalley and Crooked Lane for the ARC – This is my honest review.

5 Stars
Profile Image for SnoopyDoo.
655 reviews339 followers
September 30, 2025
***I received the audio book from the publisher through Netgalley and chose to leave a voluntary review. Thank you!***






This was a 2.5 for me. It was right there is the middle of not being horrible but also not great.





The story and pacing itself was alright, nothing too crazy. The big plot twist was not that surprising; it was easy to figure out way ahead of time. It was just a matter of how it would play out.





The main character was also just meh. I didn't really care for him all that much and rolled my eyes a little that every woman wanted to sleep with him was a bit laughable to me.





Now to the audio part of the review, that sadly was also just right on between. I could often hear the narrator's lip smack, him swallowing and sometimes very deep breaths. All the things I normally don't really hear in audiobooks. It was not horrible just sometimes really distracting and or annoying.





So overall I give it 2.5 more on the 2 than 3 side of it.














17 reviews
October 24, 2025
A Lonesome Place for Murder by Nolan Chase is a gritty, atmospheric mystery that explores the fault lines between duty, friendship, and survival in the rugged landscapes of northern Washington. As the second Ethan Brand novel, it deepens both the man and the myth a lawman caught between the ghosts of the past and the violence of the present.

When a missing friend’s remains are uncovered in an abandoned smuggling tunnel, Chief Ethan Brand is thrust into a case that strikes uncomfortably close to home. With his trusted investigator Brenda Lee Page at his side, Ethan follows a trail of deceit that winds through a decade-old disappearance, a dangerous cross-border operation, and the dark underbelly of small-town loyalty.

Chase masterfully weaves crime, conscience, and consequence into a taut, emotional story that balances procedural precision with human depth. The tension builds not only from the hunt for a killer, but from Ethan’s reckoning with loss, guilt, and the limits of justice.

Fans of C.J. Box, William Kent Krueger, or Craig Johnson’s Longmire series will find much to admire here the same blend of rugged Americana, moral complexity, and slow-burning suspense. A Lonesome Place for Murder isn’t just a case to solve it’s a portrait of a man defined by the choices he can’t escape.
Profile Image for Kristi.
202 reviews6 followers
August 24, 2025
A Lonesome Place for Murder is the second book in the Ethan Brand Mystery series, but I read it as a standalone and had no problem jumping right in. That said, I’ll definitely be going back to read the first book and am already looking forward to the next.

This police/crime thriller is told across dual timelines—past and present—which kept me engaged and added great depth to the story.

Before I even Googled it, I knew author Nolan Chase had to be from the Pacific Northwest. As a fellow Washingtonian, I loved how many local places and details he wove into the book—it gave it such an authentic feel.EQC

The audiobook narration by Kevin T. Collins was excellent. He brought the story to life and handled most of our unique place names really well. I did have to laugh when he tripped over a few—like the Puyallup Fair, Steilacoom, and Tukwila—but it just made the listening experience more fun and personal.

Thank you to NetGalley & Highbridge Audio for letting me read this ARC.
323 reviews21 followers
August 26, 2025
This was my first Nolan Chase novel and it pulled me into the story and characters. Lots of twists and turns. Good development of the town/setting.

Hoping to surprise his sons, Ethan Brand, the chief of police of a small town in northern Washington state, is contemplating buying a horse. But when the horse literally stumbles upon an abandoned smuggling tunnel, Ethan and his lead investigator Brenda Lee Page discover a dead body connected to a decade-old mystery. .

Ten years ago, Tyler Rash, a troubled friend of Ethan’s, vanished without a trace. The body in the tunnel has Tyler’s ID and personal effects.

As Ethan and Brenda Lee investigate Tyler’s disappearance, they follow a trail that leads them to a cross-border smuggling operation connected to the town’s notorious family of smugglers. And when a bomb is sent to Ethan’s own house, the case takes a deadly and personal turn. A killer is stalking Ethan Brand–a killer he’ll have to face if he wants to see his family again
Profile Image for Lisa Brooke Reads Books.
275 reviews15 followers
September 16, 2025
A Lonesome Place for Murder by Nolan Chase is a well-written and atmospheric mystery that pulled me in from the start. The remote, moody setting adds such a strong layer to the story that it almost feels like another character. Chase balances suspense with character depth, making it easy to connect with the people caught up in the mystery.

The audiobook narration enhanced the experience even more, capturing the tension and emotion that kept me engaged throughout. I appreciated how the pacing allowed the suspense to build naturally, giving space for the twists and turns to land without ever feeling rushed.

While it wasn’t flawless, it was definitely enjoyable and solidly crafted. This was an entertaining listen, and I’d happily pick up more from Nolan Chase in the future.

Thank you to NetGalley and the publisher for the opportunity to listen to this audiobook in exchange for an honest review.
941 reviews4 followers
August 25, 2025
Many thanks to NetGalley and HighBridge Audio for the free audiobook in exchange for my honest review. Kevin T. Collins does a great job narrating this story and really making it come to life.

I am new to this series and despite this being book 2, I did not have any difficulty reading it as a standalone.

Ethan is chief of police in a small town in Washington state. With his sons coming for their summer visit, he is thinking about buying a horse for them. During that process, he and his lead investigator discover a dead body and a connected smuggling tunnel.

This is a police procedural, crime story told across dual timelines of the past and present. I honestly had a hard time staying interested in this story and like more action from my thrillers. For me, this was an okay listen.
Profile Image for Tom Burkholder.
379 reviews4 followers
August 29, 2025
In the book A Lonesome Place for Murder, author Nolan Chase writes about Ethan Brand, the chief of police in a small town in northern Washington state. Ethan is wanting to buy a horse. But when he arrives to check out the horse, the horse has literally stumbled upon an underground tunnel with a dead body in it. Who is the dead man? And how is Nolan connected to him? And do they really have the right id of the body? This was a great book and it makes me want to check out the series. Reminds me of CJ Box and his Wyoming game warder Joe Pickett series. I would highly recommend this book. The audio-book narration was very good. I received a copy of this audio-book from the publisher via NetGalley in exchange for an honest review.
Profile Image for Ricki.
1,377 reviews14 followers
September 1, 2025
Better than the first in the series. Chief of Police Ethan Brand along with his deptty are looking at a horse for his sons. At the seller's pasture, he finds the owner having been thrown off the horse, and a large trench in the pasture. Seems a tunnel has collapsed.

His deputy enters the collapsed tunnel only to find a dead body. A wallet on the victim belongs to a "friend" from childhood Tyler Rash. As they investigate his last known whereabouts from 10 years ago, Ethan is swamped with memories of his long missing father and the missing Tyler he knew.

The tunnel also leads to smuggling to/from Canada, a new DEA agent and some closure about his Dad.

Still have the small town politics in a mayoral election as well.
About a 3.25 for me.
Profile Image for Dani.
230 reviews21 followers
August 25, 2025
Thank you to NetGalley for the audiobook ARC of A Lonesome Place for Murder by Nolan Chase

This was my first book by Nolan Chase and it was an intriguing introduction. Police chief Ethan Brand is faced with a personal and unsettling case when the body of a childhood friend is discovered in an abandoned smuggling tunnel. The plot combines past secrets with dangers in the present, building tension throughout. The narrator captured the atmosphere well, moving easily between characters and adding depth to the story. A well told and engaging crime novel.
475 reviews10 followers
August 29, 2025
Ethan Brand is Chief of Police and when a smuggling tunnel is unearthed and a body is found, he will need to investigate. Whose body is it and how long has it been there? Ethan and Brenda Lee will investigate and try to trace Tyler Rash who disappeared years ago. Things become very serious when a bomb is sent to Ethan’s house.

Very well written and well narrated novel (I listened to the audiobook). Excellent characters in a well paced novel. Ethan and Tyler were friends but things changed. The investigation will lead to cross border smuggling and danger. Plenty of tension and plot twists.
Profile Image for Beleisha Bernhardt.
135 reviews1 follower
August 29, 2025
"A Lonesome Place for Murder" is a beautifully written story that has a lot detail and character development. For me though, it was just too slow-paced for what I am looking for in a mystery and thriller.

I think many people will enjoy this type of writing, placed in the country, but just not for me.

Thank you Netgalley, Nolan Chase, and HighBridge Audio for the advanced audiobook. All thoughts and opinions are my own.
Profile Image for Gloria Zak.
599 reviews2 followers
September 27, 2025
I read the “first” Nolan Chase book and thought it was a first novel. On fact the author has written several books but this is a pen name. Wonder why?

In any case I enjoyed the book and its characters. I thought it was realistic how many possible scenarios were chased down, but I guess it might be necessary in a ten year old crime. However the pacing of the story was soooooo. Slooooow! I would read more in the series but hope pacing picks up in next novel
Profile Image for Jessi Robinson.
35 reviews
September 2, 2025
When a body is discovered in a tunnel in a small town, local PD works to solve to murder.

A great and well written book, however, the narrator lacked the emotions and expressions I would’ve expected from the text of the book. I would love to read it again rather than listen to it.

I appreciate Netgalley for allowing me to read an Arc copy of this book!
Profile Image for Donna.
2,370 reviews
November 7, 2025
Blaine, Washington Chief of Police Ethan Brand and his senior officer Brenda Lee Page handle another mystery of how a body was found in a tunnel near the border.

The story is a slow mover until the end. I read the first book in this series, A Lonesome Place for Dying and I

Profile Image for Larry.
1,505 reviews94 followers
September 5, 2025
The second Ethan Brand book is just as good as the first (which was five stars).
Profile Image for Eydie sanders.
425 reviews3 followers
November 20, 2025
I enjoyed this book very much! By the time he writes book three, I'll make sure I read book one.
Profile Image for Andala.
379 reviews
December 24, 2025
A chief of police who finds a murdered man who might be a person from his past.
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