I don't hand out five star ratings too frequently. But Thin Air kept me gripped all the way to the end. I got this book as part of Amazon's Kindle First program. As an Amazon Prime member, each month I get to choose on of at least six titles for no additional charge. This month I chose Thin Air.
The surprising part is that I actually read it. I have over nine hundred books on my Kindle (probably nothing compared to some people), and when I finish a title, I normally go back to the oldest title in my library. So I have yet to read one of my Kindle First titles. Until this one.
Prologue: The book begins with a murder. Written in first person from the perspective of the killer. We have no clue who it is, other than the indication that the person murdered seems to know the murderer.
Jessica Shaw is a private investigator. Originally hailing from New York (or so she thinks), she has left there and travels around, living out of cheap hotels, wherever she can find a job to work. She specializes in missing persons.
One day, as she sits in a diner, in Simi Valley, trying to figure out where to go next, she gets an email from a "John Doe," simply titled "Your next case?" She opens the email, which included only a link to a missing persons website. She clicks on the link and sees the photo of a missing person, a two or three year old kid. She had seen the photo before.
Because the kid was her.
Now there's a plot line I've never seen before. I am instantly hooked! From this point, the story shifts back and forth between several people. One of them is Amy Ong, the girl who is murdered in the prologue. As the story unveils, we get bits and pieces of what has happened to her and why.
We are also introduced to an LAPD detective named Jason Pryce. The thing is, Jessica had seen him before, too. She finally realized that she had seen him at her father's funeral a few years back.
As this story unfolds, the connections get more and more complex. There are unexpected twists and turns that simply leave the reader almost gasping for air. Perhaps I'm being overly dramatic, but it really felt that way. There were quite a few, "Oh, my GOSH!" moments in the story. Those are the things that keep me reading.
There would, no doubt, be some who would disagree with me, but I would put this story right up there with The Girl On the Train. It kept me that interested. And the ending, well, lets just say I didn't see that coming.
I will definitely be on the lookout for more of Lisa Gray's work.