3.75 Stars
Set in the small Irish village of Duneen, the kind of place where everybody knows everybody else, and if someone comes to town or someone leaves town, before sunset the whole town knows. Sergeant P.J. Collins is the village garda, an unmarried man with an uneventful life, an uneventful job, that is until the day the builders managed to unearth bones. Human bones. Most people tend to view P.J. Collins as a likeable fellow, if incapable of performing his duties should he ever be physically required to move swiftly, not that they were unkind to him.
Locals begin to gossip, conjecture on whose bones these might be, with the only person to have disappeared from their town was that Tommy Burke, leaving two young women broken hearted, Brid Riordan, his betrothed, and Evelyn Ross, who had felt he belonged to her. It is up to P.J. to investigate, something he has never had to do, never done. Detective Superintendent Linus Dunne is sent from Cork to oversee the investigation, a situation that P.J. Collins feels is wrong, it’s his first real chance and he has to take advantage of that.
Everything in Duneen changes when the body is discovered, and then a second body of an infant. P.J. finds more than he bargained for when he begins to question some of the locals about the disappearance of Tommy Burke. Nerves start to fray, people share rumours and “alternative facts.”
When P.J. begins to talk to the two women, Brid Riordan and Evelyn Ross, things get even more interesting as P.J. becomes the object of some affection. One woman is more than he’s ever had to concern himself with, but two?
There is more to this mystery, and more to this story than just the mystery. There’s the pain and heartbreak of the past held onto through the years, the sorrow of so much loss in such a small village, the loss of so many dreams, plans, hopes for the future as individuals and as a town, and the secrets kept for too long by too many. There’s also newly gained self-assurance that comes from finally being seen and appreciated – a powerful thing for someone who has believed he had little to offer. There are even a few amusing moments.
This is a delightful debut novel with some wonderful characters, but Sergeant P.J. Collins is the main character, and certainly a charming one.
Pub Date: 01 Aug 2017
Many thanks for the ARC provided by Atria Books