Three Days Missing by Kimberly Belle is a 2018 Park Row publication.
Divorced from her abusive husband and raising her gifted son alone, Kat is excited, but a little worried for her son, Ethan, when he heads off for a camping trip with his classmates. However, the last thing she ever expected was to learn Ethan had been reported missing.
Meanwhile, Stef, the mother of one of Ethan’s classmates, gets pulled into the investigation when she receives a disturbing call related to Ethan’s disappearance. Using money, social standing, and her husband’s power as a politician, she works very hard to protect her husband’s reputation at all costs, even if it means hindering the hunt for Ethan.
The story is told through the alternating perspectives of Kat and Stef as each deal with serious concerns, but Kat is the person with the most at stake. Ironically, it is Stef the author chose to put the most emphasis on. I’m not an author, so I can’t say why she chose this approach, but for me, it was very frustrating. I felt the mother of the missing child might have been given equal time and space in the story.
The initial setup was fine, and the pacing was brisk. I was engaged in the story, despite my frustration with Stef’s dominant narrative. The conclusion is chilling, in its way and did leave me feeling unsettled.
However, I think the message was murky, tepid, and uneven. Kat’s wishy- washy attitude confused me and I wish the author had made a much bolder statement about bullying and how those bullies often mature into full blown abusers. The attitude of both women in this story, is how and why the chain of abuse, instead of being broken, only becomes a longer and stronger chain. People see the signs and do nothing, are victimized, yet continue to protect and even enable abusers by giving them an out.
This book looks to be well received, putting me in the minority on this one. However, the rapid, highly unlikely conclusion, coupled with the diluted, mixed messages derailed the story, for me.
3 stars