Sometimes a book really falls into the mystery category more than any other, but Angels Burning falls much more into the fiction genre, or more precisely contemporary fiction. It is also very humorous, literally laugh out loud comical. I loved her previous book, Back Roads, there was so much depth of character building of the lives of some very poor and unfortunate people. Well, she does it again in Angels Burning but goes so much further by integrating a family that grew up in poverty and neglect but found their way out, well some of them, and created meaningful, productive and respectful lives. It is a hopeful and inspiring story of growth and redemption, and using ones own childhood experiences to understand and solve this murder case within a highly dysfunctional family. The book made me think of people needing to belong to a group, regardless of whether the group is of any worth whatsoever, the power of belonging being perhaps the most important thing in life, to just belong, good or bad.
Chief Dove Carnahan is the local chief of police of a small town in rural Pennsylvania. She grew up in this town along with her sister and brother. A young girl from the Truly family, a poor, red-neck, poverty stricken family has been murdered and Chief Dove Carnahan along with Corporal Nolan Greely who is a detective with the Criminal Investigations Division of the state of Pennsylvania. Dove and Nolan has a bit of a history.
In the process of trying to figure out who murdered the Truly girl she revisits her own past and the murder of her mother, and now the man put away for her murder, Lucky, is out of prison and he wants some answers.
The Truly family from which the victim comes from is a group of people who are not easily dealt with. Tawni O'Dell digs into their individual lives and how they all interconnect and deal with each other with their own kind of love, manipulation and hatred combined, make for a most interesting group of people, a family. Perhaps not a family any of us would want to belong to, but still a family.
This book is a page turner and you won't want to put it down.
It is a story of depth, sorrow, compassion, understanding and growth, a story of life.
I received this book from Netgalley for an honest review.