Early one morning on a misty beach, a teenager named Eliot slaughters his family. Meanwhile, as Cassandra Mitchell and Karl Alberg look forward to a Valentine's Day wedding, their plans are disrupted by a malicious man from the sergeant's past who carries guilt--and a gun. Does the stranger hold the key to a terrible secret?
This is the last book by L. R. Wright available as an ebook in this series. There is a final one, No. 9 which has not yet come out in a digital version, so I have to find it. I write this even though I was very disappointed in this case of Karl Alberg since it is not a case as such. No mystery, just a kid who seems to have lost his mind, a woman who is out of her mind and another woman who seems to be obsessed by keeping her house clean and men. After a tragedy, the kid, Eliot is placed in a detention center until it can be decided what happens to him. He runs away and tries to survive but he's just a little kid. So much for that. Betty, the woman who is out of her mind gets no help from her husband and no help from Alberg, who is her neighbor which leads her husband, Jack to blame everything that happens on Alberg and to seek revenge. And finally, Enid rents out her downstairs suite to a man and can't stop thinking about him. So very little police procedural, very little mystery, even though her writing is as good as ever.
Like all the Alberg stories before it, I gulped this down - turning the digital pages late into the night, first thing in the morning and in the back seat of the car .
Alberg is uncomfortable for most of the story, discomfited by the past. He’s confounded over and over by the inexplicable ways an ungovernable psyche can thwart both the interior lives and the wellbeing of everyday people .
The best of intentions, the loveliest of settings, or most helpful of neighbors, coworkers or friends is sometimes not enough to ward off tragedy .
What remains instead of optimism is an honor for the difference a little persistence, or constancy of love, or simple attention & companionship can bring . In a world of imperfect, hurtful people sometimes a quiet, patient attention can take the place of blame, forgiveness, and revenge and allow people a way forward, and sometimes Alberg demonstrates, that’s enough .
Bit of a downer but all characters were relatable. Except the crazy one, so I guess I can’t say that. Most characters were relatable. Simpler times decades ago. Not easier just simpler. Guess this one left me melancholy. Such a good writer.
Very little detective work in this one but still, as always, layered plots and characters. The theme of strangers plays out in interesting ways. I continue to wonder why this author did not get more attention. Seems to me Wright is much more than simply a genre writer. She's literary.
I basically really like this series. However, I thought this book was more convoluted and I didn’t enjoy it as much. I have one more to read and I’m looking forward to it.
There’s no real mystery here…just a bunch of moody, inscrutable (or downright deranged) characters. And very little Alberg and Cassandra. Wright is great with setting a scene…but she skipped the plot a bit too much for my liking.
This series is very inconsistent. This book was focused on several stories including people with mental illness and they really aren’t related, except for a link to Alberg. I do enjoy watching the TV series, though.
This was so much better than the last 3, yes they are well written but there still is something to be said regarding an economy of words. I love long lengthy narratives when they add something to the plot, but here they just don't.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
It’s all over the place. Don’t really care about the characters or the plot. I was bored to death. This was just awful. I forced myself to finish altogether I’m not sure why.
I liked this book. Was not what I was expecting. Worth the read! All the books I have read of L. R. Wright are great books in my opinion. Pick up that first one !
Even though the beginning of the series was great, sadly, I'd say this was a 2. The characters are not fully developed and the two storylines have a very thin thread between them.
It's amazing how much craziness exists in the seemingly tranquil Sunshine Coast - a teenage boy slaughters his parents, and Jack Coutts, a man from Alberg's past shows up prepared to kill him.
Alberg has suspected the boy was needing an escape from his family and had helped him find a job, but was totally unprepared for the violence that happened. He feels guilty about his failure to intervene, and for his earlier failure to prevent tragedy in Coutts' case. The passages describing Coutts' wife are truly creepy.
The series is full of interesting characters, but not for fans of action packed thrillers.
This is my favorite so far in the Karl Alberg series. Readers get to dig a little deeper into what drives Alberg, what ghosts he carries with him daily, and what guilt continues to prey on him...His compassionate side comes out, and the horrors of mental illness are briefly touched upon. I liked this a lot. Granted, it is not monumental fiction, but is a great way to leave my current world and take a trip to someone else's life...
#8 in series--Set in Sechelt British Columbia-RCMP Karl Alberg and Librarian Cassandra Mitchell work on solving a light murder mysteries-likable characters
I was very sad when I heard this author passed away/several of us at work read her series and one co-worker actually visited the area in which her series was set.
I really enjoy reading this series, set on BC's sunshine coast. The setting almost seems like one of the characters (gloomy and unpredictable) and the real characters are great in that they are compellingly flawed. The mysteries are quite tight. This book clocks in at 251 pages, but they are 251 well used pages and I didn't come away feeling that anything was missing.
L.R. Wright was one of the quiet Canadian Mystery Writers. Her books are worth a winter night's read or a beach afternoon. Nice depiction of place and atmosphere.
This time I listened to the audio version and it was very good. Rarely do I re-read a mystery but I figured - correctly as it happens - that I wouldn’t remember the story 28 years later.