Gregg Dunnett has done it again. In fact, he does it every time (from my experience thus far, anyway). The man just knows how to write a trilling thriller. This novel was such a rollercoaster ride…it literally went from oh, cute kid to oh, dead body to that can’t be right to ok, I absolutely figured that out (this is around 50%) what are they going to do for the rest of the book to whoa, totally didn’t predict that to ok, I know what’s going on here to oh, ok, no, totally surprised me there. Awesome.
Because I read tons of thrillers and one thing that’s tough to find is a genuinely surprising solution to the main puzzle. You’d think, no, no way, the entire genre basically hinges on its ability to wow the readers with its unpredictable unimaginable psychological minefields and reveals. But you read enough of these, you become something of a Sherlock when it comes to sussing out the plot and also, you find out not that many authors can actually do that final stab and twist right. Some go over the top overriding credulity and, at times, basic logic. Some just aren’t clever enough to plot out all the secrets right and you can figure things out pretty easily.
In fact, given the sheer bulk of psychological suspense that comprises the disproportionate amount of my not inconsiderable (currently averaging low 40s per month) reading regimen…I can honestly say there’s probably less than ten authors who really wow me within the genre. And Dunnett just might make the cut. Not sure, need to read more.
This book is the first in series, featuring an unusually young (for the genre) protagonist. Eleven year old Billy lives on a small island off the Northwest coast of the US with his hip surfer dude of a dad. You’d think it’d be a fun life of riding the waves, but Billy’s actually afraid of water and has no interesting in surfing. An almost preternaturally smart kid and an aspiring marine biologist, he amuses himself with various projects. And when a pretty sixteen year old tourist girl disappears after a huge local celebration, Billy decides that his new project should be finding her. So he begins to Sherlock around, which gathers all sorts of unwelcome attention, from the local cops to Billy’s past to the actual person responsible for the disappearance.
Multiple twists and turns in and out of the water follow until you arrive to a riveting conclusion. In fact, the entire production is pretty riveting. Billy makes for a very compelling (and original, how many eleven year old leading men/boys do you find in adult targeting and themed suspense thrillers) protagonist, it’s no surprise Dunnett serialized him. But it isn’t just Billy, the rest of the characters are interesting too and the island was rendered very vividly, though it may not be an ideal island to vacation on, considering.
The entire thing very much brought to mind some great BBC crime dramas, set on islands or just near the water. So yeah, quality, good writing, great plotting, excellent sustained suspense and plenty of entertainment all around. Recommended.