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466 pages, Kindle Edition
First published January 1, 1997
This is how they looked: three dead girls propped up in three straight chairs.Wow. What a meaty and cerebral read -- textured, layered, nuanced. It is a quiet novel that takes its time to carefully contemplate on its subject. And what is its subject? Despite the title, not the disappearance and death of three young girls, not really. Solving the crime, locating the victims, is secondary to the examination of a small town under siege marinating in fear and gripped by suspicion. Dobyns takes a microscopic approach and in rich, solid prose draws a detailed portrait of a townspeople succumbing to the worst of their prejudices and paranoia. It's excruciatingly intimate and painfully honest.
The suspicion didn't just go away. It just slipped back to wherever it hid.
It was still dark and he could see stars.As far as novels about a small town disturbed by a murder (or a series of murders), it wasn't too bad. It was certainly better than that other one I read not that long ago, that I thought of while reading this one due to some similarities in the story (but not in the story-telling, thankfully), Reservoir 13.
(p191)
“There were many such tributes at the end. They existed for the living, of course, for what could the dead care about such things?”