This was an enjoyable, modern small-town mystery that kept me turning the e-pages pretty consistently. I won't bother with a synopsis, which you can read in the blurb. The characters were well done and I liked the narrator -- a youngish, intelligent newspaper reporter with a drive to investigate relentlessly, pretty much no matter where things lead. The tension builds in a steady way through the book, and the writing is good. There were a couple of interesting "bombshell" points along the way that twisted the plot, bumping up the tension nicely.
I liked it just well enough that I might read the next in the series at some point, although I think this one already ties up all the possible loose ends I could think of. And the writing is really AOK.
You can skip the rest of the text below because it's just a few nitty ruminations for my own amusement...
This it a total nit, but: the book contains a tremendous load of misplaced commas. By this I mean a lot of the commas seem to have snuck out for a quick smoke or something while I wasn't looking, and when they came back inside, they slipped into the wrong place in line. So they end up coming after a space instead of before a space. The book is simply rife with these undisciplined brats.
One place fairly near the end, having to do with a username/password issue in the book, made me roll my eyes twice and mumble, "Ugh. Srsly? Oh, please." But it was minor and I don't know if anyone else would see fit to mention it, if they even notice. LOL.
OK... One of the other strange things about the book also: it contains actual phone numbers and addresses. I mean, phone numbers are just printed, right there in full, without any "555" or whatever; no elisions, no "she gave me the number" allusions to avoid just blurting out actual numbers. And, amusingly, one of the websites mentioned in the book is a something-or-other-dot-com, which has a link on it in the text. (Probably some automated process during the production slipped in that link.) But when I went to the site, it turned out to be a parked domain name. Hahaha, for about thirty seconds, I considered snapping up the domain and uploading the actual memorial content that the book says would be there... Heh heh. But I was a good boy and sat on my hands.
Oh, right... Full disclosure: I got this book at no cost on one of those Amazon Kindle-freebie days.