I really enjoyed reading this book. It's not my favorite, by far, but I did enjoy it, and while it's not a thriller or filled with suspense, there's nothing in it that dragged, either.
Before reading the book, I was under the impression that it was going to be told almost entirely from diary entries and Facebook conversations. I certainly wouldn't have liked that! To my surprise, however, the bulk of the book is told in a straightforward manner. The diary entries and Facebook conversations that are interspersed throughout the narrative are few and short.
I love mysteries, and I love mysteries set in England since I used to live there and am a bit of an Anglophile myself. This book seemed so American to me. I just didn't feel I was in England at all when I was reading it. I'm assuming it takes place in the New Forest, which I've visited. I don't expect the New Forest to be like London or Yorkshire or the West Country, but I do expect it to be a little more "English" than I found this book. That, however, could be all my fault and not the book's.
I also felt that every loose end was tied up a little too neatly in the end. Ambiguity can be maddening at times, but at other times, it can be a writer's best friend.
If you like mysteries, and especially family centered mysteries, you'll probably like this book. It's a fast read, and, like I said above, for the most part, it's quite enjoyable, even if it's not undying literature.