Ben Sullivan has always had a short temper and violent tendencies, so when his younger brother, Eric, is murdered one night on a lonely stretch of road with a bad reputation (rightly earned, owing to a series of unsolved murders that occurred there almost sixty years earlier), Ben decides to investigate the only way he knows questioning/threatening/punching anyone he can get his hands on. Revenge is all he can think about, but upon discovering that Eric (not a very nice guy to begin with) may have committed a crime, Ben finds himself trying to suppress the truth while simultaneously seeking it out. Across town and almost a month before the murder of Eric Sullivan, best friends Dagan Jefferson and Brendan Phillips come across a mysterious homemade knife while cleaning out the garage of Dagan’s deceased Grandfather. Intrigued by what they learn about the knife and its previous owner, the two friends venture out into the woods in search of an abandoned house and whatever may lie buried beneath it. Not long after, the murders begin and that lonely road—the one that no one likes to drive on at night—starts living up to its reputation.
Duncan is a mastermind. Found things centers around Ben's brother Eric's death. In the midst of looking for his brother's murder, many lives intertwined together. However good the plot is this book has many grammar errors that take away from the book. If the author had it edited this would be a thriller that could rival James Patterson.