Graduate student Olivia Eriksen is currently in the throes of writing her dissertation. Hoping to reveal whether nature or nurture is behind psychopathy, she has thrown herself into studying cases of those known to exhibit the disorder.
For Olivia, however, the interest is a little more personal. Her family, going back generations, has always had a heaping dose of the condition. From narcissists to out-and-out murderers, they’ve developed quite the following in true-crime circles. A fact that Olivia has used to her advantage as she writes her final—and biggest—graduate paper.
Desperate for more information that she could use as a resource, Olivia decides to join her family for a weekend reunion despite having kept them at arm’s length for years. After all, her new fiancé is eager to meet them and it would give her plenty of time to plunder their memories.
Unfortunately, no Eriksen family get-together is quiet for long. And this one, of course, is no different. Just hours after arriving, Olivia’s one favorite cousin is found floating dead in the lake. Then strange happenings begin. Followed quickly by the disappearance of yet another family member. On top of that, even more bad weather is on its way. Now trapped at the isolated resort, they seem to be at the mercy of whatever is going on.
What no one yet knows, however, is that an unexpected guest is about to join the rather eccentric family. A true-crime podcaster named Birdie Tan. Determined to root out the truth about a new cold case she’s investigating, she’s set her sights on the Eriksen clan. And now, no matter what Olivia thinks she knows, she’s definitely not ready for the secrets that Birdie is about to set free after all this time.
Well, I’m slightly muddled on what I think of The Family Bones. One part excellent psychological thriller that just kept raising the stakes, it also held a notable amount of over-the-top action that required significant suspension of disbelief. But once I set my BS meter to the side, it was quite the rollicking rollercoaster ride of suspense.
For obvious reasons, most of the characters were thoroughly unlikeable. From the self-serving narcissists to the out-and-out psychopaths, it was certainly hard to warm to them. But at the same time, they offered up plenty of dark humor and a righteous game of cat-and-mouse. In fact, their twisted family dynamics were the basis for quite the entertaining read.
The plot itself was rather unusual. Told through dual POVs as well as a smattering of news articles and journal entries, I was unsure just how on earth it would all come together. For obvious reasons, a great number of things were hidden until the great revelation, at which point this one sort of went off the rails for me.
Unfortunately, it was the conclusion, which should have offered up one gigantic whopper of a twist (and it did to a certain extent), that fell down just a little bit flat for me. I can’t explain how, or it’d ruin the shocking turn of events, but ultimately it did feel somewhat anticlimactic when the truth finally came to light. But then again, take my thoughts with a rather large grain of salt because my perusal of other reviews has shown that opinion to be an outlier.
Done and dusted, however, it was such a fun, quick easy read that I’ll gladly overlook my mild disappointment. After all, this original locked room mystery offered up a smorgasbord of subtle hints and interlinked plot threads that felt undeniably well-written. And I will, without a doubt, be reading more by this author in the future. With a superb premise that delivered in spades, I definitely recommend that you check this one out. Rating of 4 stars.
Trigger warning: racism, unplanned pregnancy, strangulation, incest, death by gunshot, poisoning, mention of: controlling relationship
*A note on the trigger list. As you would expect from a story based around a family of psychopaths, there were a ton of potential triggers mentioned obliquely, so I only included those that were emphasized a bit more. But if you are easily triggered, you might want to give this one a miss despite it’s less than graphic nature.
**Available on Kindle Unlimited.